On 10/23/06, Kim Springer <kimspringer@rcn.com> wrote: > > Ben, > > I would think, if you knew the movements of the linkage into the > transmission, you could find the gears and note the turn of the axles in > each of the gears. Look for 5 speeds vs 4 speeds and where the reverse > gear > position is? > > When I was maybe 15 years old, I had an old 1200 cc VW engine mounted to a > 4 > speed VW tranny that was u-bolted to a pallet. I remember turning the > input > shaft on the tranny (with the engine unbolted) and shifting the tranny > with > a pair of vice-grips on the shift shaft going into the nose cone. You > could > pretty easily make out the change in RPM of the axles, especially if you > held one of them still. > > Maybe the T3 trannys wouldn't be that easy to manipulate, but it's just a > thought. > > Kim
Kim, I don't know where Jake found it, but he identified another code I found. AGT turns out to identify it as a 5-speed with a .483 R&P.
Cheers, BenT
ps: I could not check shifting because I already packaged the bugger. pps: Let me know when you are checking out Jero's seats. |
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