nah - I'm not concerned with kepping everything stock or "period correct"
the lokar cable is definitely something I'm interested in - but for now, I'll use the 3 piece linkage that is on the car.
I did have a question though:
I used the original kickdown lever on the outside of the case. The one on the motorhome tranny was about 1/2 inch longer.
The motorhome tranny had also been recently rebuilt and has a shift kit.
----if I can't get the kickdon to engage by adjustment - would it be possible that I need switch to the longer kickdown lever?
I haven't found variations in the kickdown lever on the shift tower...but that certainly doesn't mean I've seen 'em all! There are many variations of the "shift" lever though, that is to accommodate the myriad versions of shifter controls used with all these trannys, the lever for a Scout II floor shift is cable controlled and the strangest of all!.. The dodge motorhome shifter is also a dash-mounted shifter that used a cable instead of the "johnson rod" linkage used on most of the chrysler floor shifters, the column shifters were yet another variation.
In the case of your setup...the kickdown control system that is engine-mounted must match the lever length on the trans! Even just 1/4" difference in the leverage ratio is huge! So I'd use either all the parts from the motorhome or all the parts from the charger. Then adjust the system so that as soon as the throttle linkage moves off idle, the throttle pressure lever begins to move also. When the throttle is wot mechanically, the throttle pressure control lever must be all the way back and lightly against it's internal stop on the valve body.
Throttle lever actuation and throttle pressure activation should be a "coordinated movement" in a one-to-one ratio (within reason!).
If a shift kit was installed, there is a one-time adjustment for the pressure regulation system outside the valve body. Each type of shift kit is different in that respect, so I'd have to know exactly whose shift kit was installed and which version, in the case of transgo, there are three different kits currently and in earlier days there were two "different" kits they supplied!
Congrats on the rebuild, yawl have made real progress in a relatively short period of time for hobbyists with limited time to do this stuff!