Jesse B.
Member
So I just got my rebuilt 392 running in my 1975 Scout II that has a rebuilt 727 and Dana 20 (tera low gears) combination. The axle gears are 3:54 and I am running 32x11.50 tires. I was working the bugs out of the engine and as I got it dialed in, I decided to give it a little bit of gas. I have a quadrajet on top the 392. When the light turned green, I gave it about 1/3 of the pedal and bam!! The truck did not even start to roll when the explosion occurred. The engine was still running and I tried forward, reverse, and nothing. I figured I had destroyed a drive shaft or yoke or something, so I jumped out, looked underneath, didn't see anything, locked the hubs (while people are honking their horns), and tried four wheel. Nothing. So I put it in neutral and pushed it to the side of the road and called a tow truck.
Once I got the truck home I figured I had destroyed the tera low kit, so I pulled off the output shaft tail housing and the gears looked fine. So I put the transmission into park, crawled back under the truck and I was able to spin the bull gear by hand. So, it looks like I broke my transmission output shaft.
I am very surprised by this since the torqueflight is supposed to be a strong tranny. They put these in heavier trucks and chrysler put them behind their 426 hemi in the 70s.
My question is now what? I spoke to Jeff about putting in another 727, but I am nervous about blowing it up as well. It is possible that the tranny was stressed to begin with, but it was behind a tired 304, so I doubt it. Any thoughts on what to do now? Is there a way to build up the 727 to handle more power? Would it be safer to go a manual gearbox? Thanks,
Once I got the truck home I figured I had destroyed the tera low kit, so I pulled off the output shaft tail housing and the gears looked fine. So I put the transmission into park, crawled back under the truck and I was able to spin the bull gear by hand. So, it looks like I broke my transmission output shaft.
I am very surprised by this since the torqueflight is supposed to be a strong tranny. They put these in heavier trucks and chrysler put them behind their 426 hemi in the 70s.
My question is now what? I spoke to Jeff about putting in another 727, but I am nervous about blowing it up as well. It is possible that the tranny was stressed to begin with, but it was behind a tired 304, so I doubt it. Any thoughts on what to do now? Is there a way to build up the 727 to handle more power? Would it be safer to go a manual gearbox? Thanks,