ive been told that the tolerances or clearances which ever way you want to look at it are this,,, the QUICK TIMES are marginal as far as being square at the trans mounting plate, ?? also that now since they are powder coated,which is standard not an option,(i tried to get it un powder coated,,for a ton of B,S. was given to me as far as reasoning,,which isnt imoprtant,,,) as far as fitment QT may be the hot item,but i was told with the powder coating some imput shafts may not reach in to the roller bearing at the torque converter register hole in the crank,,grinding or milling of the trans mounting face may be required,,???????
any one with different information,,lets hear it,,thanks
ive been told that the tolerances or clearances which ever way you want to look at it are this,,, the QUICK TIMES are marginal as far as being square at the trans mounting plate, ?? also that now since they are powder coated,which is standard not an option,(i tried to get it un powder coated,,for a ton of B,S. was given to me as far as reasoning,,which isnt imoprtant,,,) as far as fitment QT may be the hot item,but i was told with the powder coating some imput shafts may not reach in to the roller bearing at the torque converter register hole in the crank,,grinding or milling of the trans mounting face may be required,,???????
any one with different information,,lets hear it,,thanks
thanks and glad to hear this,, i havent gotten that far,, and was only passing along what i had been told,,what he was trying to say was that the ford tremec input barely reaches the pilot bearing and that the powder coating makes it even farther of a reach, i would of ground or blasted off the powder coating if this was the case,, but i have not gotten that far yet,, thanks for your input
Rather than killing the powder coating or any other such craziness just get an extended length pilot bearing. They stick out of the crank a little farther to compensate for a short input shaft. If you can't find one that fits, have a bronze bushing machined to fit the larger hole where the nose of a torque converter would sit in the crank and simply press a spec Mopar pilot bearing into the bronze. This is a fairly common solution and will move the pilot bearing significantly closer to the input nose. Good luck!
gray,,, thanks il be on touch with you when i resume this project,,thanks for al your support,, nice to see a company following up,,
I went to my friends transmission shop and he supplied me with a pilot bearing for a Cummins engine (Dodge 4x4). I think it was an '04. The pilot bearing has a lip or flange face on it that probably extends out 2-3 mils. I'm just guessing at that depth. It goes in just as far as the regular pilot bearing, but the lip gives you a lot more support I believe. Fits nice, can't see it hurting anything.
Daryl