Dave_J
Well-Known Member
The 1967 US Forest Service Dodge D100 Maintance bin truck I bought had a \6 and a granny 4 speed. Was Baby Poop Yellow. Had 17 inch split rim wheels. Was a 2 wheel drive. 5.36 gears in a 741 housing. The clutch in that sucker was about 12 inches and the flywheel I could not install by myself as it must have been 80 pounds. You could put in in 1st gear and let the clutch out and walk circles around the truck at idle. Top speed in 4th was maybe 65 MPH but shook so hard I never drove above 50 MPH.My original 273 4-barrel clutch lasted 90,000 miles and a bunch of speed shifts. Finally crapped out. Local parts store replacement clutch was garbage. Couldn't speed shift it even when new without slipping badly. Tried a couple different ones, finally figured out that although the catalogs listed what I was given as a 273 four barrel clutch, they were really six cylinder clutch assemblies. Finally found an actual Commando 273 clutch disc and paired that with a Weber pressure plate. Boy that would wear out your knee if you didn't put the trans in neutral at a long light, but it also didn't slip. Only problem was that after two years, one of the release fingers would bend and the clutch wouldn't fully disengage. After the second one did the same thing, I converted to a 340 clutch. Found that even a local parts store 340 clutch couldn't be speed shifted without slipping. Switched to aftermarket (Zoom, etc) which at the time would actually be in stock at your local speed shop. They worked, but wore out relatively quickly compared to my original clutch. Went through several of them (I've owned the car for over 50 years), then switched to a Centerforce dual friction clutch, and it's lasted longer than anything else I've ever run. Only problem is it bites so hard I've gotten afraid to speed shift it, but I haven't raced anything in a long time so the tenth or two I lose by not speed shifting doesn't matter.