famous bob
mopar misfit
All i drive is a clutch and none of them do what i am experiencing with this car.
Somethin dam sure wrong !
All i drive is a clutch and none of them do what i am experiencing with this car.
All i drive is a clutch and none of them do what i am experiencing with this car.
Were not saying it is your driving, were saying it could be the clutch assembly.
Also a motor mount maybe broken and with the motor tilting that would move the clutch pedal linkage all around making the pressure plate go in, out, in, out, in, out.
Is that the correct cross member at the tranny ?
It is a hydraulic clutch using a draw cyl. As for the motor mounts I'll have to pull them off and inspect. The cross member is the same for both auto and manual, rubber mount is good.Were not saying it is your driving, were saying it could be the clutch assembly.
Also a motor mount maybe broken and with the motor tilting that would move the clutch pedal linkage all around making the pressure plate go in, out, in, out, in, out.
Is that the correct cross member at the tranny ?
Will have to pull off and inspect.Have you double and triple checked the passenger's side motor mount?
Generally speaking; axle-hop is caused by the spring being wrapped up into an S shape, the tires begin to slip, and then the springs unwind and the tires catch.. This repeats over and over until you back off the throttle to stop the spring flex; or increase the throttle to keep the tires spinning.So much for serious answers to a serious problem. There are no burn outs. After putting it in reverse the problem occurs when trying to let clutch out.
For anyone who reads this i NEVER said anything about doing a burnout in reverse, this happens trying to back up slowly even slipping the clutch, so please read my original post!!!!I can't believe that it makes sense for someone to do a burnout in reverse, or even pound on there car in reverse.
Where is the common sense?
I've been involved with hot roding dragracing for over 45 years and I've only seen one dumb *** burn the tires in reverse. He called it a Texas J, burn in reverse then drop into first with tires still spinning and burn them going forward. He split the turbo 350 down the middle and never did it again.
I have read in different articles that the angles should be parallel for street and equally down for race. This is a street car. My 79 dodge warlock truck is 5 degree down at tranny and 5 degree up at rear which matches what i have read. So the mixed opinions is confusing.Generally speaking; axle-hop is caused by the spring being wrapped up into an S shape, the tires begin to slip, and then the springs unwind and the tires catch.. This repeats over and over until you back off the throttle to stop the spring flex; or increase the throttle to keep the tires spinning.
Mopar figured this out decades ago and to help prevent this she moved the rear end forward on the springs and stiffened that front portion. Of course this bias makes it worse in reverse.........
Practically; if the springs are not strong enough or not clamped, then anything that fluctuates the power application can cause the springs to Wrap up/unload. Things like an engine/transmission moving around on the mounts or the clutch being modulated not by your foot.
In the forward direction, the snubber is your first line of defense, as it wraps up and hits the floor pan, and power application keeps it there. However, in reverse it goes the opposite way and is no help at all. In reverse you only have two ways of controlling wrap up; namely the ability of the springs to resist it, and the shocks. So de-cambered,unclamped, soft, 6-cylinder springs, with worn out shocks, are the worst at controlling this.
While clamped,SS springs,with properly working shackle angles, and long shocks would probabbly be the best.
You're talking on the street right?
Put the trans back down on the mount. Up in the air it's like on a jello stick. The X-member is tight to the frame,right?
What snubber are you running?
Are the axle tubes properly welded to the perches?
How high is the rear jacked up? or
Are your spring packs flat with little to no arch? How many leafs per side and how many broken ones? Are the shackles set in the proper working angle window? Are the Front eye-bolts tight in the bushings and properly fitting the perches? Did you cut any of the spring clamps off?
Are you running the correct length rear shocks, not at one end of their working range?
8.75 rear? with a SureGrip?
The pinion angle you set has nothing whatever to do with controlling axle-hop. That pinion angle is strictly chosen to approximate some minimum working angle under full power that will; A) NEVER go nose up, and B) approximately equal the front angle but in revese phase. This is strictly to prevent parts breakage, and to help transmit maximum power in a straight line WOT situation.
For a streeter, if forced to, I recommend to bias towards cruising vibration free, making the angles closer to the same but oppositely phased and ALWAYS nose-down at the rear.
BTW; nose down at the rear means; pinion nose down, relative to the driveshaft. In elevation view, at the rear U-joint, this will always look like a shallow V.
At the front, the working angle can be as little as 1.5 degrees, which keeps the grease working around enough to keep the needles from digging grooves in the cross-pins. With slantys,1* seems to be enough.
At the back, up to 7* might be required to prevent nose-up with some hi-powered/ softly sprung combo. Typically 3 or 4 degrees is enough.
The more I think about your description, the more I imagine the shackles making trouble. Check their working angles in reverse compared to in forward. If they are flipping over-center, they could be the combination of "clunk" and "hop".
Sorry I think I read it in other posts. I would check to make sure you don't have broken leafs in the bundle....For anyone who reads this i NEVER said anything about doing a burnout in reverse, this happens trying to back up slowly even slipping the clutch, so please read my original post!!!!
It is a hydraulic clutch using a draw cyl. As for the motor mounts I'll have to pull them off and inspect. The cross member is the same for both auto and manual, rubber mount is good.
For anyone who reads this i NEVER said anything about doing a burnout in reverse, this happens trying to back up slowly even slipping the clutch, so please read my original post!!!!
Well, I'm confused. You don't get wheel hop unless you are feeding a lot of power to the tires. I had an old D-100 that would do the same thing in reverse. My guess is that a chattering clutch is causing the shaking problem.
This is not right understanding.I have read in different articles that the angles should be parallel for street and equally down for race. This is a street car. My 79 dodge warlock truck is 5 degree down at tranny and 5 degree up at rear which matches what i have read. So the mixed opinions is confusing.
Ok years ago i did a auto to manual shift in my 65 barracuda. Ever since i have been fighting a severe thud and wheel hop in reverse. Under suggestion i changed leaf springs, no help. I have played with pinion angle. Best i have had tranny down 2.7 degrees down and rear 1 degree down and slip the clutch.
So much for serious answers to a serious problem. There are no burn outs. After putting it in reverse the problem occurs when trying to let clutch out. . I actually saw the wheels hop of the ground when someone else tried it.
For the sake of being 100% sure i rmemove the pass side motor mount and it is all good.This almost has to be a broken passenger's side motor mount. Check it as I described and report back.
The tranny is a 833 OD , flywheel is nos for 360 clutch is centerforce diafram type. I tried backing off rear brakes no real diff. It's one of those things you'd have to feel to truely understand. Just don't know .You didn't say A833.. so could the trans be something else? The reason I ask is because the AX15 has a 4.22 reverse ratio, compared to something like 2.33 in the Mopar.
But I doubt you have an AX-15, you wouldda said so.
This I think is where all the confusion begins.
After putting it in reverse the problem occurs when trying to let clutch out.
If I read it exactly like you wrote it, it says that you are beginning to back up; and
this; severe thud and wheel hop in reverse. confirms it.
You also mention that this severe thud was also there before the new springs went in. And you say the severe thud comes first.
So now I'm thinking maybe the axle is rotating in the saddles. Here's my thoughts;
If while backing up, the pinion rotates severely nose down, it will bind up the U-joint and make an awful chattering. Yeah if the driveshaft stays in the back of the trans by some miracle, I suppose the wheel action could get violent.
But in this scenario the thud would not come until you put it in first and begin to take off. Now the pinion would rotate back up and the snubber would hit the floorpan, causing the thud..
Of course all the guys who are pointing to a torn mount have a much better, more likely idea; but again the severe thud comes after declutching and the engine falls back down.
I just can't think of anything that would cause the severe thud to come first, except maybe a shackle flipping over; but if only one side flipped over, the car would be listing to that side, like a barge with a shifted load.
Or something in the trunk.........tipped over,lol. Don't laugh, years ago such a thud was found to be something in the space between the quarter and the trunk-extension, flipping around.
Or I suppose if one of the rear brakes is bound up and dragging, but not seized.. Then all the torque would be transferred to the other wheel which is wanting to turn at double-speed. That would be kindof hard to modulate with a manual trans. But I'm having a hard time imagining a "severe thud" on this.
I just don't know