Absolutely Agree with Jamie about the converter, it's defective and it was just a matter of time before it happened, and if you think about it the good news is that it leaked when it did, could not of been in a more perfect spot to get it fixed...because it was going to go sooner than later...
Still watching but I wanted to say it before I forgot... I have learned SO much from you. As a 'not-real-car-guy', I have to tell you that you may have missed your calling...TEACHING. Thanks, brother! -Vic
Hey, what am I doing here now? Haha. Funny story, when I closed my shop, I had a choice - go to Rocket, or apply for the high school auto tech instructor position. I made my choice, and I have no regrets.
I’m commenting before watching. I put a 383 in my dart, my brother, and I and rebuilt a 727 and used the wrong torque converter (if I recall it was a 1966 transmission with a 67 torque converter or something) and it immediately stripped out my seal. And dumped transmission fluid all over the driveway just like that. That is why only 833s are allowed now. My brother got very tired of sleeping with transmission fluid and kitty litter in his hair.😀
I wonder if the transmission bolts being loose and the couple missing was causing it to pull away from the engine a little bit and stressed that weld? Then when the starter kicked back it finished it off? Just a wild freaking guess...
I had the same thought. I will say, the one that was closest to the starter was tight. But the two closest to it were the ones missing. The other two 3/8” bolts weren’t so tight… the impact never slowed down pulling them out.
I'm having chest pains of empathy & sympathy , too your mechanical plight , Jamie 🔧⚙ ( good Christ ) Trust me , you're not alone . Weve been noticing , garbage 🗑 quality too I'm absolutely incredulous at the " erroneous quality " of the components in the pipe line Great diagnostic skills 🙏
AWESOME vid as ussual. Im a retired trans guy worked for all the BIIG ONES, LEE MYLES, AAMCO etc. Had my own trans shop as well....IVE NEVER SEEN a Torcue converter leak frome there like yours. I guess the quality of workmenship went caca....MOPAR 4 EVER.
Yes, the new part fail is frustrating especially when you work on a long weekend or at night when the auto parts store is closed!!! In my youth I will tell you, I may have said multiple choice words,today in my early 50's nothing changed...Except my vocabulary is much better or betterer (see what I mean).. Actually,I think It's worse these days as parts seem to fail more often,and critical parts fail more often today back then it was more of the auto parts store giving the wrong part,and I never checked it properly(my fault)..Today parts actually fail more often and I just learned to deal with it..I am very calm now.I mean in my matured age I better calm down or have a coronary so no choice in the matter. As for that Coronet,it seems like a pretty decent car like you said basically some off choices..For myself I don't like high impact colors on model years it didn't come on,that's just me.I don't want to knock the car and I am not! I would gladly take it off the owners hands! Coronet owner, I will be down in 2 and a half hours to get it,okay? A 1968 Big Block B body,who wouldn't like it no matter the color! If anyone reads this? I don't care but I needed to blab,wife thinks I am actually doing work lol..
I really like this car it looks really cool I'm a fan of the black trim, I get a kick out of people thinking just because a bolt is loose or a connection is wrong the tech was an idiot. I have yet to do a major mechanical change like an engine or transmission swap an not had gremlins. There is always a loose connection a leak or just something that was missed usually it takes a week of daily driving a new build to find all the issues and sort the vehicle out where I'm confident the wife can take it without worries. But hey maybe its me I'm not perfect and I'm not a technician either I'm just a guy who grew up in the garage with his Dad working on cars. Pretty sure whoever put that trans in had no idea the torque converter had a defect in it.
No, they had absolutely no way of knowing. You can’t see it! And I couldn’t agree more. I have done so, so many jobs like this - and I have absolutely left some bolts and things loose along the way. I try to think through every single thing, but it’s not easy. There is a big difference between a small, excusable oversight and terrible workmanship. I’m not seeing the latter here.
A fan of black trim?? Well maybe on a worthless modern and late model car. But anyone who would take a old Mopar and its good stainless trim apart then sand and prep to paint, has not only ruined the parts but screwed up a old Mopar. That's like a major deduction in value. Many true Mopar buyers would say, I'll pass when it comes to buying the car. Now if the previous owner used a vinyl black decal material to cover all the trim, well that's different. Not as bad, except it still doesn't look right nor does it look better. It would be a waste of time.
In nearly 50yrs of wrenching i have never seen this one before. No one likes a lake of trans fluid on their floor and my d100 peed all over hell when i pulled the 318 and i forgot to move the pan i had to catch it. Ya dumb. But this is a manufacturing defect and very very rare so lucky you. Lucky this didnt happen as your customer was driving some place because bad things would have happened to the trans. It picked the perfect spot to shit the bed. Right on your floor 😂. I would put a new front pump seal in it because your there just sayin. As for your whining about headers they do suck to work around or install but serve a purpose as you well know. What i hate more is h pipes they suck balls. Ya they help tune the exhaust supposedly but when you have to pull a trans they are the octopus from hell. My savoy had a h pipe and my vocabulary grew a lot😂. Today i am doing the 2nd installment on the drag truck on front clip removal for dummies. 😂
Yeah, headers have a purpose - which is essentially never fully utilized by a lowly street car. Meanwhile, they make everything a humongous pain in the dick.
Everything old is new again at some point I guess...the black trim thing was popular in the 80's for awhile if I remember correctly. Im no purist on anything; I think the car looks cool. Another good video!
That car has nothing in common with the maple motors car. And it looks very well put together as far as I can see what do I know I've only been in the car business for 40 years
Got to say you brought back the memory of changing an automatic transmission on a plymouth station wagon in a 3/4 car garage during the winter, tranny on my chest trying to move it into position. Damn cold and cramped. Wasn't real sure what I was doing, took forever, but it worked, I thawed out about a week later, still hate lying on my back on concrete. You sure made it sound a lot easier then it was! Looking forward to the third video being a charm with this one. Beautiful car, great video.!
I put a 340 in in an 80 Cordoba. was a 318 car so easy swap. 8 and 3/4 out of a diplomat taxicab (323 sure grip). Another easy swap. 4 x 904 and 1 x 727. I can swap a rear wheel drive mopar trans in about an hour and a half. Finally won the battle with a built 727 with reverse manual valve body. I really miss that car.
That would seem like a reasonable response, in a time when the people that owned the company, worked at the company. Nowadays he will probably get put on hold at a call centre in malaysia.
Doubt it's your fault. The only resistance on the converter hub would be the pump gears and input shaft of the trans which are easily spun by hand, doubt it's enough to break a weld. I'd say just a weld burnt to the inside of the converter. Had that weld stopped on top you may had never never seen such a flood. Enjoyed the video!
I'm gonna stick with my first opinion of "nice parts, loose boltage" or sumpin like dat dare. I used to work at a transmission shop when I was younger and I've never seen THAT. Just sayin', it's kinda interestin', and weird. EDIT: I'm pretty sure Torque Converter Employees may have seen that, but I'm willing to bet it's fairly rare.
That is pretty wild. You don't see that happen every day. Crazy! On another note, I do like the blacked out trim. Works well with the color of this ride, even if it's not factory correct.
I agree, it's tastefully done in my opinion. The lime green with the black roof and trim, and the black wheels with the small hubcaps looks pretty good.
i use stuff called "pigmat" for spills. It absorbs almost 10 times it's weight in fluids. It's best to just lay the stuff down in anticipation of spills since they're going to happen anyway.
What a beautiful car! I love the black vinyl top with the black trim and tinted glass. The lime green color really pops against that. I realize that purist's hate changes, but the way I see it, another piece of history is back on the road and is beautiful. Plus, whoever the owner is, it is his car and can do exactly what he wants to with it.
Oh damn, I had the same issues with my 1970 Dart Swinger, it was such a cool car with the 340 but the auto trans had numerous issues just like this one was always leaking for one reason or another - it is where I learned to hate automatics I find that TSP does a pretty good job cleaning up oil spills
I was a diehard Holley guy for a long time, until I messed with my first Edelbrock. I will never, and I mean never go back to Halley. You never know until you step outside your comfort zone.
Had a TCI converter come apart on me once but it was a low 10 second car that weighed 3700 LBS this stuff can happen BUT in this application that should never have happened, Don't matter even if the teeth got ripped of the ring gear should have never started leaking from there. I guess its better it happened in your garage then coming apart out on the hwy somewhere.
Well now that you brought it up...the black trim sucks. I also would have painted it a correct color for that year. And I would have kept it a coronet 500.... Yeah I'm a purest.
Jamie, I’ve been a mechanic for a long long time and your videos bring a smile to my face (it’s easy to smile when your clean and sitting at a keyboard instead of on a creeper soaked in trans fluid LOL). A bit off topic, but one of the things I hate about pulling an automatic are the cooler lines, some can be a huge pain to get a wrench into and as you mentioned you usually have to use 2. Worse is actually having to build cooler lines from scratch on a project. A few years ago I got into the habit of building the lines to the transmission fittings while the transmission is on the ground before it goes into the car. I cut and flare those lines about a foot after where they bend to go straight to the radiator/cooler. Building the rest of the line is pretty simple and I connect the 2 lines with an inverted flare coupler. On the few occasions where I’ve had to pull the transmission back out (what do you mean it’s got too much/not enough stall) it made life a lot easier disconnecting the line at the coupler than the transmission. I just happened to remember this watching the video because I have a 46RH I have to build lines for in the next couple of weeks and thought I’d pass it on.
It makes you wonder how long for this world those welds on the converter were in the first place. Like how many normal starts you might have been able to get before the same issue happened. It's truly lucky it happened in the shop. Is there any parts/material warranty?
yeah. It's shouldn't have failed if that was a performance converter. But there is always that one time. It should be under some sort of warranty replacement, I'd think.
Jamie, I'm glad the fix was easier than it could have been. I figured that this was going to be a bushing and seal replacement video. Less work for you is a win!
I work in facilities maintenance and am a hobbyist mechanic. Today’s parts are CRAP… made far away in countries known for poor quality. I am old so won’t have to deal with this much longer but pity the guys coming after me
I once worked in a concrete facility and boss told me to broom the parking lot. Because I wanted to be done with that this century I swooped into the shed to get me a hydraulic driven sweep machine. When I was done I dumped the dirt and just in that moment a hose blew. The sucker bled out over the lot and thank god there was some kitty litter to find... When boss interrogated me I told him it could have been happened to anybody, I just was lucky. The hose was put in wrong so it rubbed and blew. Thankfully the repair dude said the same and I kept my job. I want to say: sometimes we are the chosen ones, lighten up...
It's lots of carrots out in the world. And not everybody's gonna want to Chrome. Pieces around the vinyl top look Black. But are you wanna know some as long as you're happy with it? It doesn't matter what other people think. What matters is if you're happy with it and you enjoy your car. I think it looks cool and I'm not a big green's person fan. But I think that he's quality colors for that car looks really nice
Many moons ago I have bought a 68 Dodge 500 add a winter beater car bucket seats floor shift everything and I sold it for just a couple hundred dollars in the spring I wish I had it back
Don't........this is an appropriate way to end this video. Bigger strongest bettererer just creates a weak spot somewhere else if it's not a drag car you don't need it. I have worked on some heavy machinery and when some components are over built the can ultimately harm the rest of the total package. Good find😊
That's why the bowtie starters break so easy, they won't break anything else. Been doing this a long time and never seen a converter crack like that. Don't think you can take any blame on that one,just a good thing it happened in your garage and not on road ,worst things could have happened.😮
You're right of course Jamie - that convertor should not have done what it did, regardless of the situation. Seems there's a bit of a QC problem at the ol' TCI factory there - that issue should have been caught before the unit ever got shipped. Never seen anything like it in my 60+ years.... Oh, as far as the car itself goes, it's always bugged me to see "impact" colors on pre-impact color year cars. It just looks wrong - and couple it with the "murdered" trim (done in a fit of laziness, no doubt) and things get worse for me - but you wanna know what actually BUGS me about the car? That $%#$%# Super Bee stripe on a 500. Man, that actually REALLY pisses me off. Nothing screams "I'm a knob" more than someone doing that to an otherwise noble car! See you next one, on with the show! - Ed on the Ridge
The one thing I will say on the converter failure is that the crack around the weld cannot be seen, as it is in the gap between the ring gear and the main converter body. It’s gotta be a manufacturing goof up somehow, but they never could have seen it in a quality control check.
THERE A GOOD THING HERE!!!! JAMIE!!! WHAT IF THE OWNER GAVE HER THE BEANS!!!! AND THANG BLOW UP!!! YOU REALLY SAVE THEM A LOT OF PROBLEM THAT COULD HAVE HAPPEN ✌🏻🎶🎵🎸🤘🏻
Thanks alot for this video man! I am banking on this being the same issue. Had a 727, went on a roadtrip, was gushing just as bad as yours. Got a rebuilt tranny, put it in, didnt swap converters. Drove it for an afternoon, gave out again after an afternoon of spirited driving. Fairly abrupt. So im hoping it is this, and not a series of unfortunate events resulting in two broken transmissions. Since parts an labor are double the cost here in the netherlands....
I did by a B300 van converting from a straight 6 to a 318 and the guy had put the flex plate wrong way so my oil pump in the transmission went @#$#$$! + som other bad stuff🤟
I stand in awe of anyone who can rattle off all the bolt sizes, and I assume appropriate wrench and socket sizes. I’ve been doing this for longer than most of you have been alive, and it’s always a guess, and invariably wrong. Every job I do likely takes 50% longer, because of all the trips back to the tool box to get a one size smaller or bigger tool. If I haven’t picked up the skill by now, it’s hopeless. Actually, a tools needed list pre-done would be a great help for me or anyone else with this affliction.
It helps that I have done exactly that job many, many times. There are a lot of things in life I can’t remember, but I made up my mind a long time ago to be the best I could when it comes to knowing what holds these cars together. Wire colors, bolt sizes and locations.
I know I have never seen a failure quite like this torque converter. I am guessing someone did something not quite right when they built it. Any torque converter should easily be able to withstand an overly advanced engine kickback against the starter. If not, I think I would have had one or two fail on me over the past 40+ years because I have had many times where the engine was way advanced, or the plug wires off by one on the distributer, or the distributer off by 180 degrees or a combo of all of the above. All of which can make the engine do all sorts of crazy things. This really should be covered by warranty, assuming there is a warranty.
That’s what I’m saying! It’s weird. I couldn’t possibly count the number of times I’ve had a bit of a hard start like that. I showed it on camera too. It wasn’t even that far advanced, and it was one quick instant.
Get a holley........ Noooooo........ 🤣 agree on that one. And as far as the Uncle Tony car it didn't have a vinyl top on it. And as far as the blacked out trim I kind of like it. Keep the great videos coming and try not to hit yourself in the face with any wrenches.......... 😛
Dang! First for me. My former boss bought a complete transmission from tci and it didn’t last 500 miles. A local rebuilder went through it and said there were several errors in tci’s build😳. What stall speed are you changing to?
One thing that I learned from watching TV is that using a big glass Jar with a lid you can suck out the transmission fluid with a shop vac into the jar saving the transmission fluid to be used again if its not burnt or rotten because I use ATF 4 and that stuff is expensive. Plus it doesn't make a big mess on the floor and I also use a kids swimming pool and that keeps things cleaner and I just use the shop vac to suck up the oil out of the pool. Don't use your good shop vac get one that's going to be used for oil and slop. That's my 2 cents for the day.
Jamie if the whole world only saw things through the lens of Mopar reality then it would be a GREAT PLACE TO LIVE. At least if you're any example of what that looks like LOL. Rock on Duck Dodgers!
Jeez, a giant crack in the torque converter, and a giant crack in the ground???? Is an earthquake next??? Wow, hope it's not going to be one of "those" kind of Coronets.
I had a 68 Coronet 440 dark green with factory A/C. It looks like yours had factory A/C but now the heater hoses go from the heater core to the evaporator using both coils!
No, the second set of hose connections are the factory heater valve used on AC cars. The evaporator connections are taped off. But yeah, the important AC components are no longer winning with us.
Mr. Jaimie, could it be the combination of loose bolts, two missing bolts combined with the pressure on the ring gear allowed the trans case to move, ...while putting a jolt on the torque converter which cracked the weld?
That is my current line of thinking. And, it also has an aftermarket high torque mini starter (not the one used on 90s Dodge stuff.) But I will say, unlike the other two bolts that come in from the transmission side, the bolt closest to the starter that was actually there was tight. So I just can't say with certainty if that was a factor or not.
I’m learning that with any classic car you can throw out any labor time guide because there are so many variables it’s impossible with junk quality parts. Now that is becoming a real issue with newer junk as well.
Oh I know it. And obviously I have seen a good few messed up new parts, as seen here. But even without that, it seems like every time I dig into a classic like this, I always find more than I expected.
Glad you found leak and can move on. I like Edelbrock carburetors. When the kick down is adjusted correctly they work perfectly. I also like the electric chokes on them. People spend some big bucks on stuff for their cars but then bolt on a POS bolt on battery clamp, instead of buying a $15 to $20 new cable. Those bolt on clamps become problems when you are least expecting a problem.
Happiness that you found the leak! Happiness that you and your customer have carburetor choices other than Holley. I recall with chagrin that in the 80s I was considering doing the European flat black thing on all of the Challenger’s trim. Then in the 90s, I was thinking about black chrome for all the trim. I have returned to my senses and will stick with chrome and stainless.
None. There is the Super Bee stripe, and the plain stripe used on the Coronet R/T (funny enough that's called a bumble bee stripe, figure that one out)
Jamie my 70 Challenger VP clone did the same thing. I tightened the trans tube to the block. Must have broke the O ring seal. I replaced the O ring and problem solved. Well as far as the trans leak😂. Thanks for letting me know “ we are not alone”!
I find that color distasteful, to say the least. I will refrain from stating how I really feel about it. I don't want my comment thrown out by utube. Holley would be a better choice though.
I could live with SOME blacked out trim; but I'm like you.... when I see a 1968 car, I want it to LOOK 1968. It's like people who hack pristine dashes to put a CD player in a vintage car. There's a certain level of hell awaiting them. Vintage car. Vintage parts. However, one thing I AM very averse to is the body-color painted upper doors. Interior metal is Interior color. Always has been, always will be. Like.... why not paint the engine bay black while you're at it?? 🤢
Wait, wasn’t the interior metal color optional? Maybe I’m thinking of two tone interiors, where the upper and lower panel could be a different shade that might happen to kinda match the exterior. I am no expert
@@DeadDodgeGarage Interior metal (upper, and in some cars, lower) was always the dominant interior color - never an exterior color. In black & white interiors, you'd get white door panels and seats, but black dash, steering column, carpet and painted metal. Generally speaking, the door metal was painted the same color as the dash metal. Not the same paint mind you, but the same color.
I didn’t know that the trans was fresh when I made my staining comment last video. And I agree, headers in a tight engine bay suck and that converter shouldn’t have failed with one kick back. I quit the biz after 31 years and have seen my fair share of shit that shouldn’t have happened but did.
I had a rear diff housing all the welded on brackets for the 4 link springs ect . The welds every thing was just tack on i told him it was going to fail but he had to run it for the class he was running in. He really wanted to start the season and end the season with all the points he could get . It was a very well known manufacturer of rear diffs and housings his rear diff turned in to a center diff on the first attempted pass.
I'm almost ready to put the pushbutton A727 back into the bellhousing of the forward look car where it will reside, hope the transmission doesn't piss all over the floor on my end also! Anywho, same issue i had with the factory Torque converter, the Transmission has been pissing all over the place, hence why i pulled the tranny for a rebuild, and the leak was coming from the weld, coincidence?
Setting the timing within a degree or two before starting the engine is so easy I don't understand where the problem is, see people fighting with this all the time, use your brain people. And I have no idea what you were talking about drilling holes in the distributor cap, I've read automotive magazines and shop manuals for 64 years and have maintained every vehicle I have ever owned and have never heard of such a thing.
Cool, but I've done this many, many, many times, and none of the techniques I've ever seen have worked for me. I eyeball it to get it fired up and go from there. Usually, this is no problem. Today, it somehow became one.
Turn your engine to tdc compression stroke for number one cylinder and then align the timing marks to ten degrees advanced then remove the distributer cap and back the distributor so the reluctor is in front of the pickup, then replace the distributor cap and hook up your timing light then turn on your ignition and while holding you timing light trigger rotate the distributor towards the reluctor until it fires the timing light and then lock your distributor down, it can't be any simpler then that! You can then fine tune you're timing once you fire your engine up, I've done it that way as long as I can remember, and it has worked every time. Same principle if you have an old points distributor.@@DeadDodgeGarage
Yeah you nailed the diagnostics right on the head that thing was not welded together right and it happens what why does it have to happen to you I feel so sorry for you but I've been in places like that myself it sucks and you just gotta suck it up and thank God that you don't have it everyday my experience was it used to be like it went in weeks a week at a time you had nothing but trouble but that wasn't too often but it did happen such is life what's your reminds me I will be going through the same problem as you went through only mine is A4 speed putting the car to bed i was putting the car to bed i was running the starter relay with a screwdriver rock back against the starter as i was hitting the starter relay taking out the starter drive bendix so why will be going through the same problem you went through this spring got the same thing headers oil pan and H pipe
I can clear up the fluid stain on the header. It was caused by a loose tranny return line right above and in front of the header pipe. Again another of many many loose bolts and clamps..
Good to know! We actually have a converter shop in our area who we have dealt with many times too. The owner chose to replace it with another TCI. I hope that was a good call.
Just wanted to elaborate on my method of cleaning up fluid spills. I have a dust pan that I made out of sheet metal. If you have fabrication and layout skills along with a way to bend sheet metal a simple dust pan shape is pretty easy to form up . I also bent over a 1/2 inch flange around the top edge so it isn't a razor blade at the top. Mine is 8 inches wide and 1 1/2 inch tall at the back tapering down to 1/2 an inch at the front. I like it because the pan itself is totally flat. Of course you could buy a metal dust pan but I used to work in sheet metal shop. A 4 or 6 inch drywall knife works great as wall to push the fluid toward the pan. Harbor Freight has those at about 1/2 the price of everyone else. Just hold the dust pan at the edge of the puddle, hold the drywall knife/scraper pretty vertical and scape along the concrete towards the pan opening and send the tidal wave of fluid into the pan, dump and repeat. That mess will go away with a lot less hassle than rags and kitty litter alone and a lot less waste of cleanup material . Finish up with rags and kitty litter and quite a bit less anxiety. I also like to pulverize some of my kitty litter into almost a dust with a metal hammer / short handle sledge and keep a small separate container of that for special quick absorbing emergencies. One last thing about this method, it works just as well on other materials ( ie. already wet kitty litter , saw dust even metal filings ) because there are no bristles for material to get caught up in. Hope this was helpful and a time saver for everyone that gives it a try, of course you will have to still have to finish up with something with bristles. Good luck Jamie and keep them coming. OK one last thing, a safety thing about our old classics. Seat belts alone won't do it. You need a shoulder harness. Watch the YOU Tube video of the 1200 HP Mercury crashing. Yeah and they even had warning time!!
Brilliant! I’m going to pin this for future reference. And - if anyone thinks they’re getting out of a real wreck in one of these classics unscathed, oh boy, they’ve got another thing coming. There is a reason locking shoulder belts have been mandated for fifty years. But that addition by itself doesn’t solve the lack of crumple zones, or air bags, or… like everything else about these classic designs. Driver beware, they are rolling death traps.
@@DeadDodgeGarageI totally get that classics were built before modern safety standards and will never meet the level of safety that we now have. I am only wanting as many people as possible to see that video just to get an idea of how much force there is to a mid speed accident. That being said my word of advise is that if you have a car equipped with shoulder harnesses wear them if at all possible. Anyone that doesn't have them, I saw a neat trick at a car show where a guy with a convertible installed a piece of chain to the rear seat belt anchor and attached a section of seatbelt to it so he could click it into a receiver at the front seat for a makeshift shoulder harness. He would disconnect and hide his what I consider, ingenious idea, under the back seat until he was ready to hit the road again. Just an idea to consider for anyone out there who wants shoulder harnesses but thought it is too complicated to do. I personally feel safer just with the addition of a shoulder harness even in a classic.
"Don't.............. This"... words to live by, Jamie. 😅
I’m proud of that one. Haha.
@@DeadDodgeGarage it was a particularly good ending.
Those edelbrock carbs are great, very tunable. I had one in my 360 power wagon, tuned it once and never had a problem again.
Wow, a bad torque converter. That is really strange. Looking forward to the next video.
Absolutely Agree with Jamie about the converter, it's defective and it was just a matter of time before it happened, and if you think about it the good news is that it leaked when it did, could not of been in a more perfect spot to get it fixed...because it was going to go sooner than later...
Yes, I was thankful actually! Not sure Jamie was thou!😂
Still watching but I wanted to say it before I forgot... I have learned SO much from you. As a 'not-real-car-guy', I have to tell you that you may have missed your calling...TEACHING. Thanks, brother! -Vic
Hey, what am I doing here now? Haha. Funny story, when I closed my shop, I had a choice - go to Rocket, or apply for the high school auto tech instructor position. I made my choice, and I have no regrets.
The heck with the negative and haters Jamie. I value all of what you bring in increasing knowledge of our beloved Mopars.
I sure wasn't expecting that! What a freak leak! 👍
You’re a poet and didn’t know it.
I’m commenting before watching. I put a 383 in my dart, my brother, and I and rebuilt a 727 and used the wrong torque converter (if I recall it was a 1966 transmission with a 67 torque converter or something) and it immediately stripped out my seal. And dumped transmission fluid all over the driveway just like that. That is why only 833s are allowed now. My brother got very tired of sleeping with transmission fluid and kitty litter in his hair.😀
I wonder if the transmission bolts being loose and the couple missing was causing it to pull away from the engine a little bit and stressed that weld? Then when the starter kicked back it finished it off? Just a wild freaking guess...
I had the same thought. I will say, the one that was closest to the starter was tight. But the two closest to it were the ones missing. The other two 3/8” bolts weren’t so tight… the impact never slowed down pulling them out.
Just so you should know you guys are the only ones I found with the correct drain plug for my 68 sport satellite, so I ordered one ! Thanks !
I'm having chest pains of empathy & sympathy , too your mechanical plight , Jamie 🔧⚙
( good Christ )
Trust me , you're not alone .
Weve been noticing ,
garbage 🗑 quality too
I'm absolutely incredulous at the
" erroneous quality " of the components in the pipe line
Great diagnostic skills 🙏
AWESOME vid as ussual. Im a retired trans guy worked for all the BIIG ONES, LEE MYLES, AAMCO etc. Had my own trans shop as well....IVE NEVER SEEN a Torcue converter leak frome there like yours. I guess the quality of workmenship went caca....MOPAR 4 EVER.
Yes, the new part fail is frustrating especially when you work on a long weekend or at night when the auto parts store is closed!!! In my youth I will tell you, I may have said multiple choice words,today in my early 50's nothing changed...Except my vocabulary is much better or betterer (see what I mean)..
Actually,I think It's worse these days as parts seem to fail more often,and critical parts fail more often today back then it was more of the auto parts store giving the wrong part,and I never checked it properly(my fault)..Today parts actually fail more often and I just learned to deal with it..I am very calm now.I mean in my matured age I better calm down or have a coronary so no choice in the matter.
As for that Coronet,it seems like a pretty decent car like you said basically some off choices..For myself I don't like high impact colors on model years it didn't come on,that's just me.I don't want to knock the car and I am not! I would gladly take it off the owners hands! Coronet owner, I will be down in 2 and a half hours to get it,okay? A 1968 Big Block B body,who wouldn't like it no matter the color!
If anyone reads this? I don't care but I needed to blab,wife thinks I am actually doing work lol..
Oh I totally agree on high impact colors. Haha… Mark might have some problems with that.
I really like this car it looks really cool I'm a fan of the black trim, I get a kick out of people thinking just because a bolt is loose or a connection is wrong the tech was an idiot. I have yet to do a major mechanical change like an engine or transmission swap an not had gremlins. There is always a loose connection a leak or just something that was missed usually it takes a week of daily driving a new build to find all the issues and sort the vehicle out where I'm confident the wife can take it without worries. But hey maybe its me I'm not perfect and I'm not a technician either I'm just a guy who grew up in the garage with his Dad working on cars. Pretty sure whoever put that trans in had no idea the torque converter had a defect in it.
No, they had absolutely no way of knowing. You can’t see it! And I couldn’t agree more. I have done so, so many jobs like this - and I have absolutely left some bolts and things loose along the way. I try to think through every single thing, but it’s not easy. There is a big difference between a small, excusable oversight and terrible workmanship. I’m not seeing the latter here.
A fan of black trim?? Well maybe on a worthless modern and late model car.
But anyone who would take a old Mopar and its good stainless trim apart then sand and prep to paint, has not only ruined the parts but screwed up a old Mopar. That's like a major deduction in value. Many true Mopar buyers would say, I'll pass when it comes to buying the car.
Now if the previous owner used a vinyl black decal material to cover all the trim, well that's different. Not as bad, except it still doesn't look right nor does it look better. It would be a waste of time.
apparantly the current owner and myself do not agree sometimes its cool to do something different from everyone else @@mr.b2107
This one is not your fault, Jamie. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience.
In nearly 50yrs of wrenching i have never seen this one before. No one likes a lake of trans fluid on their floor and my d100 peed all over hell when i pulled the 318 and i forgot to move the pan i had to catch it. Ya dumb. But this is a manufacturing defect and very very rare so lucky you. Lucky this didnt happen as your customer was driving some place because bad things would have happened to the trans. It picked the perfect spot to shit the bed. Right on your floor 😂. I would put a new front pump seal in it because your there just sayin. As for your whining about headers they do suck to work around or install but serve a purpose as you well know. What i hate more is h pipes they suck balls. Ya they help tune the exhaust supposedly but when you have to pull a trans they are the octopus from hell. My savoy had a h pipe and my vocabulary grew a lot😂. Today i am doing the 2nd installment on the drag truck on front clip removal for dummies. 😂
Yeah, headers have a purpose - which is essentially never fully utilized by a lowly street car. Meanwhile, they make everything a humongous pain in the dick.
Everything old is new again at some point I guess...the black trim thing was popular in the 80's for awhile if I remember correctly. Im no purist on anything; I think the car looks cool. Another good video!
That car has nothing in common with the maple motors car. And it looks very well put together as far as I can see what do I know I've only been in the car business for 40 years
Got to say you brought back the memory of changing an automatic transmission on a plymouth station wagon in a 3/4 car garage during the winter, tranny on my chest trying to move it into position. Damn cold and cramped. Wasn't real sure what I was doing, took forever, but it worked, I thawed out about a week later, still hate lying on my back on concrete. You sure made it sound a lot easier then it was! Looking forward to the third video being a charm with this one. Beautiful car, great video.!
I put a 340 in in an 80 Cordoba. was a 318 car so easy swap. 8 and 3/4 out of a diplomat taxicab (323 sure grip). Another easy swap.
4 x 904 and 1 x 727. I can swap a rear wheel drive mopar trans in about an hour and a half.
Finally won the battle with a built 727 with reverse manual valve body.
I really miss that car.
That failed weld is odd.
I would hope the manufacturer would want the converter back to check & correct their processes.
That would seem like a reasonable response, in a time when the people that owned the company, worked at the company. Nowadays he will probably get put on hold at a call centre in malaysia.
Agreed, but as he didn’t actually buy it, we didn’t bother contacting them.
better break it now in the garage than on the highway with a hot exhaust for the fluid to catch on fire
Exactly! We’re definitely glad for that.
Doubt it's your fault. The only resistance on the converter hub would be the pump gears and input shaft of the trans which are easily spun by hand, doubt it's enough to break a weld. I'd say just a weld burnt to the inside of the converter. Had that weld stopped on top you may had never never seen such a flood. Enjoyed the video!
I'm gonna stick with my first opinion of "nice parts, loose boltage" or sumpin like dat dare. I used to work at a transmission shop when I was younger and I've never seen THAT. Just sayin', it's kinda interestin', and weird. EDIT: I'm pretty sure Torque Converter Employees may have seen that, but I'm willing to bet it's fairly rare.
What do you think would be an appropriate torque converter for this application? 3600 rpm seems quite slippery for a mild-ish engine.
We went for 2500. We’ll see how it goes!
That is pretty wild. You don't see that happen every day. Crazy! On another note, I do like the blacked out trim. Works well with the color of this ride, even if it's not factory correct.
I agree, it's tastefully done in my opinion. The lime green with the black roof and trim, and the black wheels with the small hubcaps looks pretty good.
Always good to view and learn from one of your videos Jamie. Thanks.
Wow never would have guessed that the converter failed. I guess it's better than it being the transmission itself though.
Thx Jamie!
i use stuff called "pigmat" for spills. It absorbs almost 10 times it's weight in fluids. It's best to just lay the stuff down in anticipation of spills since they're going to happen anyway.
I have a box of it. Now, where I put it… that’s an important question
What a beautiful car! I love the black vinyl top with the black trim and tinted glass. The lime green color really pops against that. I realize that purist's hate changes, but the way I see it, another piece of history is back on the road and is beautiful. Plus, whoever the owner is, it is his car and can do exactly what he wants to with it.
Buff off that Bee stripe and leave the rest! Car looks great!
Oh damn, I had the same issues with my 1970 Dart Swinger, it was such a cool car with the 340 but the auto trans had numerous issues just like this one was always leaking for one reason or another - it is where I learned to hate automatics
I find that TSP does a pretty good job cleaning up oil spills
I was a diehard Holley guy for a long time, until I messed with my first Edelbrock. I will never, and I mean never go back to Halley. You never know until you step outside your comfort zone.
Had a TCI converter come apart on me once but it was a low 10 second car that weighed 3700 LBS this stuff can happen BUT in this application that should never have happened, Don't matter even if the teeth got ripped of the ring gear should have never started leaking from there. I guess its better it happened in your garage then coming apart out on the hwy somewhere.
Well now that you brought it up...the black trim sucks. I also would have painted it a correct color for that year. And I would have kept it a coronet 500.... Yeah I'm a purest.
Jamie, I’ve been a mechanic for a long long time and your videos bring a smile to my face (it’s easy to smile when your clean and sitting at a keyboard instead of on a creeper soaked in trans fluid LOL).
A bit off topic, but one of the things I hate about pulling an automatic are the cooler lines, some can be a huge pain to get a wrench into and as you mentioned you usually have to use 2. Worse is actually having to build cooler lines from scratch on a project. A few years ago I got into the habit of building the lines to the transmission fittings while the transmission is on the ground before it goes into the car. I cut and flare those lines about a foot after where they bend to go straight to the radiator/cooler. Building the rest of the line is pretty simple and I connect the 2 lines with an inverted flare coupler. On the few occasions where I’ve had to pull the transmission back out (what do you mean it’s got too much/not enough stall) it made life a lot easier disconnecting the line at the coupler than the transmission.
I just happened to remember this watching the video because I have a 46RH I have to build lines for in the next couple of weeks and thought I’d pass it on.
Might have happened when the starter kicked back on ya Jamie; as you suspected . Is what it is man. Get her back on the road bro.
It makes you wonder how long for this world those welds on the converter were in the first place. Like how many normal starts you might have been able to get before the same issue happened. It's truly lucky it happened in the shop. Is there any parts/material warranty?
Exactly. Who knows. He didn’t purchase it originally so we don’t really have any recourse.
@@DeadDodgeGarage That's too bad. At least he can get a better quality and more appropriate replacement installed now.
Nice car, the trim looks good with that shade of green.
yeah. It's shouldn't have failed if that was a performance converter. But there is always that one time. It should be under some sort of warranty replacement, I'd think.
Jamie, I'm glad the fix was easier than it could have been. I figured that this was going to be a bushing and seal replacement video. Less work for you is a win!
Me too... I couldn't agree more! Haha.
I work in facilities maintenance and am a hobbyist mechanic. Today’s parts are CRAP… made far away in countries known for poor quality. I am old so won’t have to deal with this much longer but pity the guys coming after me
I don’t mind about the color either. It looks……good…..I guess. I wouldn’t have picked that green but meh.
I once worked in a concrete facility and boss told me to broom the parking lot. Because I wanted to be done with that this century I swooped into the shed to get me a hydraulic driven sweep machine. When I was done I dumped the dirt and just in that moment a hose blew.
The sucker bled out over the lot and thank god there was some kitty litter to find...
When boss interrogated me I told him it could have been happened to anybody, I just was lucky. The hose was put in wrong so it rubbed and blew.
Thankfully the repair dude said the same and I kept my job. I want to say: sometimes we are the chosen ones, lighten up...
It's lots of carrots out in the world. And not everybody's gonna want to Chrome. Pieces around the vinyl top look Black. But are you wanna know some as long as you're happy with it? It doesn't matter what other people think. What matters is if you're happy with it and you enjoy your car. I think it looks cool and I'm not a big green's person fan. But I think that he's quality colors for that car looks really nice
You know, when a car pukes all over your shop floor, that's a desperate cry for help. You better keep that car.😋
Noooo, that means it needs to get out of my sight before something else happens 😅
@@DeadDodgeGarage yeah, but aren't you the one who has to fix it anyway?
Many moons ago I have bought a 68 Dodge 500 add a winter beater car bucket seats floor shift everything and I sold it for just a couple hundred dollars in the spring I wish I had it back
I think I like my 4 speeds even more now 👍
Bingo! The ol torque converter delete!
Until your rear main seal starts to leak and but oil all over you clutch plate then it’s came over . 😫.
Don't........this is an appropriate way to end this video. Bigger strongest bettererer just creates a weak spot somewhere else if it's not a drag car you don't need it. I have worked on some heavy machinery and when some components are over built the can ultimately harm the rest of the total package.
Good find😊
Well done Jaimie !
That's why the bowtie starters break so easy, they won't break anything else. Been doing this a long time and never seen a converter crack like that. Don't think you can take any blame on that one,just a good thing it happened in your garage and not on road ,worst things could have happened.😮
Right. Totally agreed. And I haven’t either…
Another kick ass video Jaime and don’t worry about the haters lol
I agree not your fault that converter is made to take thrust and much more than you gave it on that kickback manufacture error most likely
I love the color combo
You're right of course Jamie - that convertor should not have done what it did, regardless of the situation.
Seems there's a bit of a QC problem at the ol' TCI factory there - that issue should have been caught before
the unit ever got shipped.
Never seen anything like it in my 60+ years....
Oh, as far as the car itself goes, it's always bugged me to see "impact" colors on pre-impact color year cars.
It just looks wrong - and couple it with the "murdered" trim (done in a fit of laziness, no doubt) and things get
worse for me - but you wanna know what actually BUGS me about the car?
That $%#$%# Super Bee stripe on a 500. Man, that actually REALLY pisses me off.
Nothing screams "I'm a knob" more than someone doing that to an otherwise noble car!
See you next one, on with the show!
- Ed on the Ridge
The one thing I will say on the converter failure is that the crack around the weld cannot be seen, as it is in the gap between the ring gear and the main converter body. It’s gotta be a manufacturing goof up somehow, but they never could have seen it in a quality control check.
You pointed a camera at the car. Of course it broke in some non-sensical way.
THERE A GOOD THING HERE!!!! JAMIE!!! WHAT IF THE OWNER GAVE HER THE BEANS!!!! AND THANG BLOW UP!!! YOU REALLY SAVE THEM A LOT OF PROBLEM THAT COULD HAVE HAPPEN ✌🏻🎶🎵🎸🤘🏻
Wow the most random parts breakage possible
Green paint = 🤢🤮
Blacked out trim = 🤢🤮🤮
Holley carbs = 🤢🤢🤮🤮
This channel = 🤘🤘🤘
Never had a problem with Holley 👍🏻
They just don't make things like they used to!
I did my /6 904 in my 86 d100 3 times before I realized the torque converter snout was cracked chewing up the seal😮😮😮
😬
Thanks alot for this video man! I am banking on this being the same issue.
Had a 727, went on a roadtrip, was gushing just as bad as yours. Got a rebuilt tranny, put it in, didnt swap converters. Drove it for an afternoon, gave out again after an afternoon of spirited driving. Fairly abrupt.
So im hoping it is this, and not a series of unfortunate events resulting in two broken transmissions. Since parts an labor are double the cost here in the netherlands....
I did by a B300 van converting from a straight 6 to a 318 and the guy had put the flex plate wrong way so my oil pump in the transmission went @#$#$$!
+ som other bad stuff🤟
Ugh…
I stand in awe of anyone who can rattle off all the bolt sizes, and I assume appropriate wrench and socket sizes. I’ve been doing this for longer than most of you have been alive, and it’s always a guess, and invariably wrong. Every job I do likely takes 50% longer, because of all the trips back to the tool box to get a one size smaller or bigger tool. If I haven’t picked up the skill by now, it’s hopeless. Actually, a tools needed list pre-done would be a great help for me or anyone else with this affliction.
It helps that I have done exactly that job many, many times. There are a lot of things in life I can’t remember, but I made up my mind a long time ago to be the best I could when it comes to knowing what holds these cars together. Wire colors, bolt sizes and locations.
I know I have never seen a failure quite like this torque converter. I am guessing someone did something not quite right when they built it. Any torque converter should easily be able to withstand an overly advanced engine kickback against the starter. If not, I think I would have had one or two fail on me over the past 40+ years because I have had many times where the engine was way advanced, or the plug wires off by one on the distributer, or the distributer off by 180 degrees or a combo of all of the above. All of which can make the engine do all sorts of crazy things.
This really should be covered by warranty, assuming there is a warranty.
That’s what I’m saying! It’s weird. I couldn’t possibly count the number of times I’ve had a bit of a hard start like that. I showed it on camera too. It wasn’t even that far advanced, and it was one quick instant.
Get a holley........ Noooooo........ 🤣 agree on that one. And as far as the Uncle Tony car it didn't have a vinyl top on it. And as far as the blacked out trim I kind of like it.
Keep the great videos coming and try not to hit yourself in the face with any wrenches.......... 😛
I’ll try 😅
Dang! First for me. My former boss bought a complete transmission from tci and it didn’t last 500 miles. A local rebuilder went through it and said there were several errors in tci’s build😳. What stall speed are you changing to?
We’re going with a ~2500 stall. It should work much better.
One thing that I learned from watching TV is that using a big glass Jar with a lid you can suck out the transmission fluid with a shop vac into the jar saving the transmission fluid to be used again if its not burnt or rotten because I use ATF 4 and that stuff is expensive. Plus it doesn't make a big mess on the floor and I also use a kids swimming pool and that keeps things cleaner and I just use the shop vac to suck up the oil out of the pool. Don't use your good shop vac get one that's going to be used for oil and slop. That's my 2 cents for the day.
Good one!
Jamie if the whole world only saw things through the lens of Mopar reality then it would be a GREAT PLACE TO LIVE. At least if you're any example of what that looks like LOL. Rock on Duck Dodgers!
Jeez, a giant crack in the torque converter, and a giant crack in the ground???? Is an earthquake next??? Wow, hope it's not going to be one of "those" kind of Coronets.
😬
I had a 68 Coronet 440 dark green with factory A/C. It looks like yours had factory A/C but now the heater hoses go from the heater core to the evaporator using both coils!
No, the second set of hose connections are the factory heater valve used on AC cars. The evaporator connections are taped off. But yeah, the important AC components are no longer winning with us.
Mr. Jaimie, could it be the combination of loose bolts, two missing bolts combined with the pressure on the ring gear allowed the trans case to move, ...while putting a jolt on the torque converter which cracked the weld?
That is my current line of thinking. And, it also has an aftermarket high torque mini starter (not the one used on 90s Dodge stuff.) But I will say, unlike the other two bolts that come in from the transmission side, the bolt closest to the starter that was actually there was tight. So I just can't say with certainty if that was a factor or not.
I’m learning that with any classic car you can throw out any labor time guide because there are so many variables it’s impossible with junk quality parts. Now that is becoming a real issue with newer junk as well.
Oh I know it. And obviously I have seen a good few messed up new parts, as seen here. But even without that, it seems like every time I dig into a classic like this, I always find more than I expected.
Glad you found leak and can move on. I like Edelbrock carburetors. When the kick down is adjusted correctly they work perfectly. I also like the electric chokes on them. People spend some big bucks on stuff for their cars but then bolt on a POS bolt on battery clamp, instead of buying a $15 to $20 new cable. Those bolt on clamps become problems when you are least expecting a problem.
Happiness that you found the leak! Happiness that you and your customer have carburetor choices other than Holley.
I recall with chagrin that in the 80s I was considering doing the European flat black thing on all of the Challenger’s trim. Then in the 90s, I was thinking about black chrome for all the trim. I have returned to my senses and will stick with chrome and stainless.
Make sure the block to transmission alignment dowels are there. Biggest cause of failed pump bushings, seals and excessive wear on the Converter neck
They are there.
Not related to the mechanical trouble, what kind of tail stripe actually belongs on a 68 or 69 Coronet 440 & 500?
None. There is the Super Bee stripe, and the plain stripe used on the Coronet R/T (funny enough that's called a bumble bee stripe, figure that one out)
Jamie my 70 Challenger VP clone did the same thing. I tightened the trans tube to the block. Must have broke the O ring seal. I replaced the O ring and problem solved. Well as far as the trans leak😂. Thanks for letting me know “ we are not alone”!
I find that color distasteful, to say the least. I will refrain from stating how I really feel about it. I don't want my comment thrown out by utube. Holley would be a better choice though.
Booooooooo
But I'm with you on the color.
I could live with SOME blacked out trim; but I'm like you.... when I see a 1968 car, I want it to LOOK 1968. It's like people who hack pristine dashes to put a CD player in a vintage car. There's a certain level of hell awaiting them. Vintage car. Vintage parts.
However, one thing I AM very averse to is the body-color painted upper doors. Interior metal is Interior color. Always has been, always will be. Like.... why not paint the engine bay black while you're at it?? 🤢
Wait, wasn’t the interior metal color optional? Maybe I’m thinking of two tone interiors, where the upper and lower panel could be a different shade that might happen to kinda match the exterior. I am no expert
@@DeadDodgeGarage Interior metal (upper, and in some cars, lower) was always the dominant interior color - never an exterior color.
In black & white interiors, you'd get white door panels and seats, but black dash, steering column, carpet and painted metal.
Generally speaking, the door metal was painted the same color as the dash metal. Not the same paint mind you, but the same color.
I didn’t know that the trans was fresh when I made my staining comment last video.
And I agree, headers in a tight engine bay suck and that converter shouldn’t have failed with one kick back. I quit the biz after 31 years and have seen my fair share of shit that shouldn’t have happened but did.
I had a rear diff housing all the welded on brackets for the 4 link springs ect . The welds every thing was just tack on i told him it was going to fail but he had to run it for the class he was running in. He really wanted to start the season and end the season with all the points he could get . It was a very well known manufacturer of rear diffs and housings his rear diff turned in to a center diff on the first attempted pass.
Wow...
I'm almost ready to put the pushbutton A727 back into the bellhousing of the forward look car where it will reside, hope the transmission doesn't piss all over the floor on my end also!
Anywho, same issue i had with the factory Torque converter, the Transmission has been pissing all over the place, hence why i pulled the tranny for a rebuild, and the leak was coming from the weld, coincidence?
I’ll be damned. That’s very interesting. Apparently it’s not all that uncommon.
@@DeadDodgeGarage for sure! Now I know also that's not at all uncommon. XD
No blame on you. It was a junk part.
Just bad luck could of happened to anyone. Trim black out doesn't do it for me, but I'm all in for making your car your own.
You didn't break the converter, you saved the transmission, at least the car doesn't have cragars on it.
How dare you 😅
Setting the timing within a degree or two before starting the engine is so easy I don't understand where the problem is, see people fighting with this all the time, use your brain people. And I have no idea what you were talking about drilling holes in the distributor cap, I've read automotive magazines and shop manuals for 64 years and have maintained every vehicle I have ever owned and have never heard of such a thing.
Cool, but I've done this many, many, many times, and none of the techniques I've ever seen have worked for me. I eyeball it to get it fired up and go from there. Usually, this is no problem. Today, it somehow became one.
Turn your engine to tdc compression stroke for number one cylinder and then align the timing marks to ten degrees advanced then remove the distributer cap and back the distributor so the reluctor is in front of the pickup, then replace the distributor cap and hook up your timing light then turn on your ignition and while holding you timing light trigger rotate the distributor towards the reluctor until it fires the timing light and then lock your distributor down, it can't be any simpler then that! You can then fine tune you're timing once you fire your engine up, I've done it that way as long as I can remember, and it has worked every time. Same principle if you have an old points distributor.@@DeadDodgeGarage
It’s a pretty cool car! But I’m with you high in-pack colors are awesome but on 70s and up!
Yeah you nailed the diagnostics right on the head that thing was not welded together right and it happens what why does it have to happen to you I feel so sorry for you but I've been in places like that myself it sucks and you just gotta suck it up and thank God that you don't have it everyday my experience was it used to be like it went in weeks a week at a time you had nothing but trouble but that wasn't too often but it did happen such is life what's your reminds me I will be going through the same problem as you went through only mine is A4 speed putting the car to bed i was putting the car to bed i was running the starter relay with a screwdriver rock back against the starter as i was hitting the starter relay taking out the starter drive bendix so why will be going through the same problem you went through this spring got the same thing headers oil pan and H pipe
I can clear up the fluid stain on the header. It was caused by a loose tranny return line right above and in front of the header pipe. Again another of many many loose bolts and clamps..
Consider Top Line Converter for a better value in torque converters. We pay attention to details.
Good to know! We actually have a converter shop in our area who we have dealt with many times too. The owner chose to replace it with another TCI. I hope that was a good call.
Just wanted to elaborate on my method of cleaning up fluid spills. I have a dust pan that I made out of sheet metal. If you have fabrication and layout skills along with a way to bend sheet metal a simple dust pan shape is pretty easy to form up . I also bent over a 1/2 inch flange around the top edge so it isn't a razor blade at the top. Mine is 8 inches wide and 1 1/2 inch tall at the back tapering down to 1/2 an inch at the front. I like it because the pan itself is totally flat. Of course you could buy a metal dust pan but I used to work in sheet metal shop. A 4 or 6 inch drywall knife works great as wall to push the fluid toward the pan. Harbor Freight has those at about 1/2 the price of everyone else. Just hold the dust pan at the edge of the puddle, hold the drywall knife/scraper pretty vertical and scape along the concrete towards the pan opening and send the tidal wave of fluid into the pan, dump and repeat. That mess will go away with a lot less hassle than rags and kitty litter alone and a lot less waste of cleanup material . Finish up with rags and kitty litter and quite a bit less anxiety. I also like to pulverize some of my kitty litter into almost a dust with a metal hammer / short handle sledge and keep a small separate container of that for special quick absorbing emergencies. One last thing about this method, it works just as well on other materials ( ie. already wet kitty litter , saw dust even metal filings ) because there are no bristles for material to get caught up in. Hope this was helpful and a time saver for everyone that gives it a try, of course you will have to still have to finish up with something with bristles. Good luck Jamie and keep them coming. OK one last thing, a safety thing about our old classics. Seat belts alone won't do it. You need a shoulder harness. Watch the YOU Tube video of the 1200 HP Mercury crashing. Yeah and they even had warning time!!
Brilliant! I’m going to pin this for future reference. And - if anyone thinks they’re getting out of a real wreck in one of these classics unscathed, oh boy, they’ve got another thing coming. There is a reason locking shoulder belts have been mandated for fifty years. But that addition by itself doesn’t solve the lack of crumple zones, or air bags, or… like everything else about these classic designs. Driver beware, they are rolling death traps.
@@DeadDodgeGarageI totally get that classics were built before modern safety standards and will never meet the level of safety that we now have. I am only wanting as many people as possible to see that video just to get an idea of how much force there is to a mid speed accident. That being said my word of advise is that if you have a car equipped with shoulder harnesses wear them if at all possible. Anyone that doesn't have them, I saw a neat trick at a car show where a guy with a convertible installed a piece of chain to the rear seat belt anchor and attached a section of seatbelt to it so he could click it into a receiver at the front seat for a makeshift shoulder harness. He would disconnect and hide his what I consider, ingenious idea, under the back seat until he was ready to hit the road again. Just an idea to consider for anyone out there who wants shoulder harnesses but thought it is too complicated to do. I personally feel safer just with the addition of a shoulder harness even in a classic.
We're all here to learn and be entertained.....good content and thanks....can't wait for more.
That motor still has the cast crank in it,I wonder if the whole bottom end stock?
Crank definitely, but pistons have been changed.
Thanks for the video, great diagnosis and great content. Keep it up brother!
I like the green on it. I prefer the chrome trim, but the black looks good too. I’d love to own it.
That’s why what happened, happened. Uncle did a video on that.
Which video?
I would say it happened during that first fire up and you had a bad weld
Indeed
Wow such a strange part failure..great detective work!