BigBlockMopar
BigBlockMember
This is only the OD-unit being offered, as shown.
That won't work for you. You need the complete transmission.
That won't work for you. You need the complete transmission.
So, you didn’t have to alter the upper part of the cross member like everyone says you have to? I’m building a 67 convertible and don’t really want to alter my upper part of the cross member if I don’t have toIv ran an a500 in my 68 more door for a few years and love it. Did nothing to the floor and used all the shift/throttle linkage from the 904. Had to cut the driveshaft and redo the crossmember. I run 3.23 gears and usually get about 20 mpg driving 70-80 mph with a stock 318
What did you end up having to modify? How are you liking the swap?So, you didn’t have to alter the upper part of the cross member like everyone says you have to? I’m building a 67 convertible and don’t really want to alter my upper part of the cross member if I don’t have to
I have an RE here that I need to rebuild and put back in my Durango, I have way more than $300 out on it so far and still need the brass thrust washers all the snap rings and the rebuild kit for it plus a fresh converter before I can reassemble. Probably gonna have to wait till tax time to be able to get the funds....The RE series are fully electronic. You need a stand-alone computer to make them function.
I had a 46RE for sale for awhile here...It was a rebuilt unit with an expensive converter and I was lucky to get $200 for it.
Hold out for a RH unit.
this is relevant to my interests.... anybody out there running this have anything to say about the kit?TransGo makes a MVB kit and I intend to use that if I live long enough. The 727 I ran in mine was already MVB
TransGo - TFOD-3 - Reprogramming Kit with Manual Shift Control
This TFOD-3 Reprogramming Kit fits 1988 to 2003 Dodge, Ram and Jeep vehicles with both small case transmissions such as the A500, 40RH, 42RH, 40RE, 42RE,transgo.com
yeah, i saw that. was all: oh, here's a viable option. then i saw the price.HGM Electronics has the Compushift unit that controls everything. A couple years ago, they were around 375.00. Then they became unavailable, now, they are available again for a price of over 700.00.
What mods were needed to floor, or upper crossmember arch?Installed my 42rh behind the mild 318 last winter. This summer I took it on a 6000 mile road trip. Never missed a beat and really kept the rpms down especially on the interstates. even at 55mph up it was a real boon. I set it up on two switched - completely manual, easy to wire. After the first 1000 miles I found myself shifting out of OD and lock-up as I came into a stop without even really thinking about it. On an A-body it sure is easier than the mods needed for the 727 based version. You are right, the low 1st and second gear were a boost and allowed me to use higher (numerically lower) gears that I would have otherwise.
I had to remove a good deal of the loop up into the transmission hump, and move the inner transmission cross member bolt on the drivers side away from the trans, including the tube that keeps you from crushing the crossmember with the bolts. We bent a new piece to replace the removed section of the crossmember arch out of much heavier metal, but that is not sufficient in my opinion. There is a terrific amount of stress on that entire crossmember due to the torque of the torsion bars, which will try to bend the entire crossmember down to the middle. That is why the USCT crossmember is soooo damned heavy. It converts the crossmember to one like C-bodies have (which have no loop over the trans), but rather depends on the bolted in crossmember to take the load. This means that when you work on the arch you have to take all the pressure off the torsion bars (back out the adjusters) and you have to do the same every time that you remove the bolted in crossmember. That USCT bolted crossmember also has to be cut back and the bolt moved away from the trans to match the work on the arch. Once you have the trans put up on the crossmember you will see the spots where the trans tunnel needs to be massaged with a hammer - not much, just a little, and no cutting of the floorpan need. There are also some rear pieces of the trans case that need to be cut off - they are there to mount the trans in a truck and are unneeded in a car.What mods were needed to floor, or upper crossmember arch?
This was for a long distance road trip car and was behind a mildly modified 318 (maybe 275-300hp) so just a heavy duty rebuild and a stage 1 trans-go kit to increase pressures. I bought the trans and related items from a member here who went from the A500 to a 5 or 6 speed manual, and I ended up with a leftover 2800 stall lock up converter if that would be of interest PM me. By the way if you want to use the Mopar console floor shift, the side of the case on the drivers side interferes with the rod that runs through the floor. #MoparMatt2000 copied the one that he made for his son's car. He made a jig when he did the first one so I sent him mine and he did the needed modification. If you ask him really nicely and are willing to pay for it you might get him to do one for you. Figuring it out yourself would take days.srt12, other than the mods needed for install: floor/x-member fab, wiring for OD/LU, did you do any mods to the trans itself? higher stall? shift kit? etx?
I have a 727 here that came out of a 64 pickup with a /6 and the adapter plate, it looks as long as any other normal length 727 except it's longer by the length of the brake drum hanging off the back.The OEM 727 in the A100 was a short tailshaft unit and as such the driveshaft was no more about than 18 inches long. The A500 is a pretty long unit due to the extra length of the OD unit and the OD unit of the A500 will eat up most, if not all of the space the original driveshaft occupies. You might not even have room for a driveshaft!