Hi,
My Name is Tom Mobley, I'm a mod over at chevelles.com, ran across Bruce over there a year or so ago.
I have a 70 Chevelle, 406 roller cam, Dart iron heads, etc., daily driver, that's a small roller. it now has 3.73 posi and fresh 200-4R. I know a guy who has a Buick-only wrecking yard, snagged a 87 BRF from him as a good used tranny. When I got it home it had a lot of stuff in the pan but I cleaned it up and installed it. It wouldn't hardly shift at all, appeared to be shifting on the governer. I think the the TV piston or whatever you call is was stuck. I ended up taking the car to the guy, he pulled the tranny ans sent it to a shop he deals with to be rebuilt. The guy supposedly knows how to rebuild a 200-4R, he's done a number of them for my buddy.
Problem:
When they gave me the car back it acted like the cable was too tight. Shifted late and hard, had to take my foot off the gas to get it to shift into OD. After a couple weeks of this I took it back to the buddy, we went for an extended test drive and fiddled with the cable. Ended up loosening it about 5-6 notches. Tranny is then much better overall, but the 1-2 and 2-3 shifts are sloppy. It does go into OD at about 40 -45 with light throttle. I can't stand the 1-2 shift so I tightened up the cable one notch and it's better, but now I have to take my foot off the gas to get it to shift into OD in a timely fashion. I should mention that this car has a Q-jet carb with the right throttle arm and bracket setup.
What to do? There's a slight flare in the 1-2 shift and occasionally a little flare in the 2-3 shift. I'm normally a pretty light-footed driver, soccer moms drive by me all the time. If I tighten up the cable some more it will fix the 1-2 and 2-3 shifts, but then I'll be stuck shifting into OD with my foot like before. Now, if I stomp it it goes too full-boogie mode just fine.
Seems like something is goofed up in the relationship between the line pressure and the throttle pressure, something that goes deeper than the cable adjustment.
Anybody got any bright ideas? Personally, I think my buddy and his buddy with the tranny shop are tapped out. I don't really want to go back to them, doubt if they can help much.
Tom
My Name is Tom Mobley, I'm a mod over at chevelles.com, ran across Bruce over there a year or so ago.
I have a 70 Chevelle, 406 roller cam, Dart iron heads, etc., daily driver, that's a small roller. it now has 3.73 posi and fresh 200-4R. I know a guy who has a Buick-only wrecking yard, snagged a 87 BRF from him as a good used tranny. When I got it home it had a lot of stuff in the pan but I cleaned it up and installed it. It wouldn't hardly shift at all, appeared to be shifting on the governer. I think the the TV piston or whatever you call is was stuck. I ended up taking the car to the guy, he pulled the tranny ans sent it to a shop he deals with to be rebuilt. The guy supposedly knows how to rebuild a 200-4R, he's done a number of them for my buddy.
Problem:
When they gave me the car back it acted like the cable was too tight. Shifted late and hard, had to take my foot off the gas to get it to shift into OD. After a couple weeks of this I took it back to the buddy, we went for an extended test drive and fiddled with the cable. Ended up loosening it about 5-6 notches. Tranny is then much better overall, but the 1-2 and 2-3 shifts are sloppy. It does go into OD at about 40 -45 with light throttle. I can't stand the 1-2 shift so I tightened up the cable one notch and it's better, but now I have to take my foot off the gas to get it to shift into OD in a timely fashion. I should mention that this car has a Q-jet carb with the right throttle arm and bracket setup.
What to do? There's a slight flare in the 1-2 shift and occasionally a little flare in the 2-3 shift. I'm normally a pretty light-footed driver, soccer moms drive by me all the time. If I tighten up the cable some more it will fix the 1-2 and 2-3 shifts, but then I'll be stuck shifting into OD with my foot like before. Now, if I stomp it it goes too full-boogie mode just fine.
Seems like something is goofed up in the relationship between the line pressure and the throttle pressure, something that goes deeper than the cable adjustment.
Anybody got any bright ideas? Personally, I think my buddy and his buddy with the tranny shop are tapped out. I don't really want to go back to them, doubt if they can help much.
Tom