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Navy Horn 16

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Navy Horn 16 last won the day on March 3 2017

Navy Horn 16 had the most liked content!

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  • Location
    Austin, Texas
  • Interests
    Pontiac Power, Longhorn Football, Guns, Hunting, Fishing, ya know....man stuff.

Forever Pontiac

  • Name
    Nathan
  • Gender
    Male
  • Year
    1977
  • Car
    Trans Am
  • Trim
    Clone
  • Engine
    469
  • Style
    Coupe
  • Color
    Imperial Blue Metallic

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  1. This is the link to CPT: http://www.cpttransmission.com/ I was just under $4K total for the project. $200 for the core off of Craigslist $200 to break it down and ensure it was suitable for rebuild $1000 for the rebuild, $500 for install and setup. $2000 in parts Mr. Carr said the convertor is "2800-3000". It flashes to about 3500. I'm very happy with the convertor. It doesn't "chug" at highway speeds with low RPM, and it soaks up the shifts in low gears. It drives like a Cadillac when cruising, and a track car when manually shifting.
  2. There are many, many threads here regarding the subject of swapping an overdrive transmission for one of the stock 3 speeds. I thought that it might benefit some folks here to hear what I did, why, and how it turned out. Here goes nothing: The car: It started life as a 77 Esprit, had been cloned to resemble a Trans Am when I got it, and recently had the engine upgraded to a 469 with the following specs: 1970 cast 455 block, 40 over, 4.25 inch forged crank. E-Heads via Kauffman (ported to 320) Butler designed Comp Cam (Intake [email protected] 243, Lift w1.5 .540" exhaust [email protected] 248 .563 112 lobe seperation)...my rockers are 1.65. Ported HSD Intake (thanks Steve C), 1.75 inch primary headers 10.1-1 compression ratio 3.42 gears All of that went to a fairly strong but soft shifting TH350. I had recently run a 12.9 in the quarter at San Antonio Raceway, and spun in the first 2 gears. So, I decided to do the hot-rod thing and take something that was working well as is, and spend a bunch of money to change it. After doing a ton of research, I decided on building a 200 4R. There is a ton of conventional wisdom out there that says the 200 4R isn't strong enough to handle big torque numbers, but there are plenty of others that have proven that false. The guy that "wrote the book" on performance 200 4Rs is Art Carr, and his current shop is CPT out in California. Several folks I have come to know and respect recommended him, and Butler Performance also sells his product (that's a solid endorsement). I ultimately decided to have the transmission built at a local shop, and source all of the rebuild parts from CPT. The reason for this was warranty and location. CPT has a solid warranty, but if anything goes wrong you have to ship the transmission back to California. My local guy gave me a 1 year no-questions-asked warranty for parts and labor. That's pretty good, even with me telling him that I plan on beating on it. The mechanical reasons for picking the 200 4R were: Better low gear ratios than the TH350 and 700 4R Able to build without any computer or electronics Better overdrive ratio (.67) that the 700 or 4L (.70/.75) Same length as the TH350, so no drive shaft modifications. Some things that I learned along the way: An additional transmission oil cooler was required. I got one from CPT and it went in easy. The crossmember has to be changed and moved back from TH350. If you have a TH-400, you are good. The shifter conversion kit is neat, but not necessary. Mine has positive stops in low, 2nd, drive, overdrive, neutral, & reverse and the only part from the kit that I used was the decal. Research what speedometer gears you need prior to building the transmission. 200 4R gears are on the governor, and you have to drop the pan to get to them. What I bought from Art Carr: Super Rebuild Kit Hi performance intermediate drum 10 vane hi performance rebuild kit w/rotor heat treated stator support hi-pro 2nd gear band non-lockup valve body .500 boost valve rev boost valve 200 4R super servo 2nd gear anchor pin 10 inch HD/Super Torque 27 spline convertor (3000 stall) Oil cooler TV cable Q Jet Brackets In our ordering conversation, Mr. Carr asked about my rear gear and kinda groaned at my 3.42s and said that he thought it would work "a lot better" with 3.80 somethings. I figured that I would be improving my launch no matter what with the better low gears, and OD would be optional for highway use anyway. I was around $2100 in parts from CPT, and had $150 in my core from Craigslist. My local shop here in Dripping Springs, TX did a great job with the build. I had one little hick-up with the governor, but my decision to have it built locally paid off and it was fixed under warranty with no issue. I have had the car back for about a week, and I can say without a doubt that it is a huge upgrade from the TH350. It is quicker from the start, and the overdrive is fantastic on the highway. I'm running about 800 RPM lower at highway speed (may be off by a few, I'll know for sure once I get my speedo figured out). I'm burning a lot less gas, and my engine is staying a lot cooler. I haven't had it to the track for a solid test yet, but I'm looking forward to that once it cools off a bit. I don't have AC, so this car is only moving in the morning and early evenings (central Texas y'all). If I had a magic wand and could change something.... I'd have the transmission hold each gear a little longer under less than WOT. As it is, under moderate acceleration the car is in 3rd by 20mph and 4th by 30. The thing is, the motor makes so much torque that it doesn't matter. Even with the aggressive shift kit, acceleration under WOT is incredibly smooth and the convertor totally absorbs the shifts. I can give it half throttle and it will leave pretty hard and not feel a shift all the way up to 70MPH and not go much above 2200 rpm. Things don't go well if you hammer it at 30 after it already in 4th gear. It's about like you would expect if you jumped on the throttle of a standard transmission in OD. It will kick-down, but it isn't like a brand new car with EFI and a computer controlled transmission. I have also found that if I am going to accelerate hard out of a 90 degree turn, it's best to just go ahead and pull it down into second. It also shifts harder and and at better points under WOT if I do it manually. Essentially, it drives like a Cadillac in D or OD...but if I want to beat on it, I've got to do some of the shifting myself. I'm guessing that I'm not the first person to experience this kind of thing, which is why Hurst and B&M etc exist. I'll probably invest in one of their products at some point, but am just gonna drive it for a while. Overall, I am very happy with the upgrade, and would recommend Art Carr (CPT) to anyone nationwide and DC Transmissions here in Dripping Springs, TX to anyone in the area. Feel free to ask questions and poke fun at my expen$e. I'll do my best to answer them.
  3. I've got the stuff listed for sale now on e-bay and CL, but I'm secretly hoping that it doesn't sell. I'm going to need all or most of that stuff at some point in the future, and I'd be more than happy to have a virgin 400 block sitting on the shelf for the next time I feel like enriching the Butler boys in TN.
  4. I went into the shop in Austin last week where that episode was filmed for some dyno tuning. I saw a Pontiac carb sitting in the corner of a storage area, and went over to check the numbers and it came back for a 1970 GTO. I asked to buy the carb, and they wouldn't sell it...unless I bought the whole drive train. So, I did. I now own (formerly) Lance Armstrong's 1970 GTO drive train from the air cleaner through the TH400 transmission. It was properly put away, but has been sitting for a long time. Other than being greasy, it is in good shape. I've certainly seen a lot worse be rebuilt. It's a YS code 400 wearing #13 heads and the block number is 9799914. Half the web sites say that #13 heads are Ram Air III, but I don't have the VIN on the car so I'm not making that claim. I'd be really interested in knowing if anybody knows where that GTO is these days. It's worth quite a bit with the drive train that is in my garage. Or if anyone is interested in a 1970 GTO drive train, give me a shout.
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