727 and 904 will both require a kick down cable. Actually pretty much any dodge rear wheel drive trans will require one. The two transmissions are very similar in design and operation. Just different torque handling capabilities.
727 and 904 will both require a kick down cable. Actually pretty much any dodge rear wheel drive trans will require one. The two transmissions are very similar in design and operation. Just different torque handling capabilities.
My Buddy is having the same problem with an old truck 727. He never ran it but had the transmission rebuilt and when he went back to the transmission guy and said it was out of an old military truck the transmission guy told him they had lower planetary gears. I never heard of such a thing but can it be true?
The Tflites in those old army vehicles may have lower gear planetaries but the rear gear in those rigs are in the 5's or 6's (5:13 etc.) Wide open they only go 45 or 50. It's the rear gears. Like old farm trucks. Same MO.My Buddy is having the same problem with an old truck 727. He never ran it but had the transmission rebuilt and when he went back to the transmission guy and said it was out of an old military truck the transmission guy told him they had lower planetary gears. I never heard of such a thing but can it be true?
The Tflites in those old army vehicles may have lower gear planetaries but the rear gear in those rigs are in the 5's or 6's (5:13 etc.) Wide open they only go 45 or 50. It's the rear gears. Like old farm trucks. Same MO.
The normal every day 904 will bolt right up to any Mopar small block. (even the V6's)
Most newer automatics from rear wheel drive mopars will as well.
I'm running a 42RH (A500OD) behind my 5.9 Magnum.
(80mph at 2,100 RPM's and 25+ mpg doing it.) on the hiway.
Around town?
Who cares.
You should drive there instead of walking, besides I don't think a scooter will go that far on a charge.
What should I be looking at for cost (without the driveshaft) for a 42RH? Are they fairly rare or would they be around pretty regularly?
If your careful, you might be able to cut the sleeve of the stock throttle cable and that will give you the flexibility to use it instead of buying another one
As for the transmission, have you tried manually shifting it?
(It is probably toast, because it was ran without a kickdown but there may be a manual valve body in there aswell)
The throttle cable should be a breeze? I’m dreading that job actually, I’m 6’4 and they put RAM pickup seats in this thing because they (whoever put this together) wanted electric seats, ugh. Seats are on my todo list because of how crappy it is in the cabin. I’m going to be upside down with my legs in who knows what position just to get to the top of that pedal, lol. Hopefully though it goes smooth and I spend as little time as possible inside the car.I shouldn't have mentioned the manual valve body, your first post makes it clear it is not, because it was shifting on its own back then, correct?
It does look like you trimmed the kickdown pretty tight, and left the adjustment on the wrong side, so to speak
You may need to trim the outer sheath to make it work
On the bright side, the throttle cable should be a breeze
Here's a suggestion for you.
Take some of the bend out of the bracket where the green line is so that the cable points right at your linkage attaching point, and then add a slight bend in the throttle pressure cable bracket to get it back in line.
Also, since the trans shifted before I suspect the TP cable is just adjusted too tight.
With zero throttle at the carb, the lever at the trans should be pretty much fully forward.
View attachment 1715099810
Thanks Beast. I actually ordered the Lokar throttle cable anyways and that should be here this afternoon, so I'll actually just bite the bullet if I can and install it, that should give me a much better fit for the car anyway. I kinda figured I had something out of whack with the adjustment by that same reasoning, that it shifted before and that I could actually hear it revving up more than it had before. I feel like I am on the right track at least. If not, I've reached out to some of the people on the forum selling 904s and I found one or two near me on Craig's list, so worst case scenario, I put in a used one that I feel confident should work correctly and I learn how to rebuild them by using the existing one as the guinea pig.
Makes sense to me, but I can't help thinking most of the problem right now is that it's too tight on the TP adjustment.
That will make it delay the shifts and rev higher before it does shift.
In fact you can adjust it so high that it pretty much won't shift at all until it gets way up there in RPM's.
I'll tell you a clue about it being adjusted to tight, and that is if you put it in D and go but it doesn't upshift AND also does not have engine braking when you let off the throttle.
Meaning you let off and it feels like it's coasting in neutral.
That's exactly why I put that spring in the front of the throttle connection to the carb, holy **** you're good. It felt like the throttle wasn't coming down at all, I thought that was from the cable so I put a spring in front to pull back on the assembly in case it was getting stuck because of the alignment of the throttle cable.
So, the problem has to be somewhere in the run between the transmission and where it comes up the firewall (Lokar said I should have to cut some off because it should be too long and I thought it was too short). Putting the adjustment there was the only way it would fit onto the throttle linkage when the linkage was wide open which is I thought the way it was supposed to be adjusted. With the adjustment right in the middle on the TV linkage and I was shy of the throttle connector by about an inch or so.
If I remember correctly I had about an inch of cable or more (the inner cable) once it was all hooked up.
I put the return spring for the throttle pressure on the trans (actually from the lever to the front cooler line) because the lever has some spring to it in it's travel but it doesn't pull the lever all the way forward without an external spring on it.
I really do think you might have yours too tight and that's why it won't shift.
The cable is made to mount under one of the extension housing bolts and pulls the lever to the rear of the car when the throttle opens.
Is this the way yours is?
Forgot to ask, which spring did you put at the trans? The fatter or the skinnier of the 2?If I remember correctly I had about an inch of cable or more (the inner cable) once it was all hooked up.
I put the return spring for the throttle pressure on the trans (actually from the lever to the front cooler line) because the lever has some spring to it in it's travel but it doesn't pull the lever all the way forward without an external spring on it.
I really do think you might have yours too tight and that's why it won't shift.
The cable is made to mount under one of the extension housing bolts and pulls the lever to the rear of the car when the throttle opens.
Is this the way yours is?
Success! Good to hear!Ok so after much ado, I may have saved my transmission yet. Attached is a photo of the linkage and cables attached up at the carb with a decent amount of slack for further adjustment. I video recorded a trial run to upload so I’ll upload that a little later but essentially it’s shiftin now between 30 and 35 for 1 -> 2 and 45 and 50 for 2 -> 3. I don’t think that’s optimal but at this point I’m ecstatic that it’s shifting semi normally. It’s not kicking down so there’s work to be done for sure, but I’m at a better starting point than I was before.
View attachment 1715100736
Ok so after much ado, I may have saved my transmission yet. Attached is a photo of the linkage and cables attached up at the carb with a decent amount of slack for further adjustment. I video recorded a trial run to upload so I’ll upload that a little later but essentially it’s shiftin now between 30 and 35 for 1 -> 2 and 45 and 50 for 2 -> 3. I don’t think that’s optimal but at this point I’m ecstatic that it’s shifting semi normally. It’s not kicking down so there’s work to be done for sure, but I’m at a better starting point than I was before.
View attachment 1715100736
Sounds good so far, but pretty high in the shift points.
I just used a light spring to insure the lever on the trans was pulled all the way forward with zero throttle.
Without a shift kit the trans should be in third by about 20mph.
I think with the shift points so high that is what is messing with your kickdown, and once the shifts are within a normal range it should come back.
You are almost there.