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Technical Automatic to manual transmission swap

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by Zombilly!, Jul 13, 2022.

  1. Zombilly!
    Joined: Jul 17, 2020
    Posts: 6

    Zombilly!

    Automatic to manual transmission swap
    I wanted to know what you think is a good, new, manual transmission for my 59 galaxy if I want to retain shifting on the column?
     
    Last edited: Jul 13, 2022
  2. 427 sleeper
    Joined: Mar 8, 2017
    Posts: 3,188

    427 sleeper
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    I don't know if any such animal exist's...
     
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  3. 383 Mopar or Chevy?
     
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  4. Moriarity
    Joined: Apr 11, 2001
    Posts: 34,021

    Moriarity
    SUPER MODERATOR
    Staff Member

    If you want a manual shift on the column then it will have to be a 3 speed and you are going to need a stick shift steering column. Also I bet there are no brand new 3 speed transmissions being made
     
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  5. Saginaw 3 speed.
    Ford column shift column
    Fab/modify the linkage
    Locate a manual pedal assembly.
    I like 3speeds but if I do all that itta have more than 3
     
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  6. Zombilly!
    Joined: Jul 17, 2020
    Posts: 6

    Zombilly!

    Chevy
     
  7. squirrel
    Joined: Sep 23, 2004
    Posts: 57,645

    squirrel
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Sure, buy a new Muncie 4 speed, and get the steering column from an early Econoline van with the 4 speed, and do all the necessary modifications to your Galaxy column.

    But seriously....get a Saginaw 3 speed, it's a lot easier! it won't be new, but they're still not too hard to find, I think. I gave away the ones I had, not too long ago.
     
  8. fleetside66
    Joined: Nov 20, 2006
    Posts: 3,060

    fleetside66
    Member

    I'm totally with you in the stick swap, as difficult as it may be, but you might save yourself a good bit of grief if you relent to a floor shift & bag the whole linkage insanity. They were notorious for jamming up, even from the factory. I had a neat little Studebaker Lark V-8 convertible, with a 3-speed on the column & I was always on the side of the road unjamming the greasy linkage under the hood. I even carried a set of gloves in the trunk, just for that. As long as you're going that route, I agree with Anthony about more speeds than three. Good luck...you're gonna need it. But, do it.
     
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  9. miker98038
    Joined: Jan 24, 2011
    Posts: 1,326

    miker98038
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    59 galaxie with a 383 sbc? Am I missing something here?
     
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  10. I betcha someone, probably here, would like an auto column and pedal for a galaxy
     
    Last edited: Jul 13, 2022
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  11. squirrel
    Joined: Sep 23, 2004
    Posts: 57,645

    squirrel
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    I had a 59 Edsel, which was mostly the same car as the Galaxy. The three speed column shifter on that car was excellent...nothing like the crap I've experienced on GM and Mopar, and later Ford, column shifters.
     
  12. Squablow
    Joined: Apr 26, 2005
    Posts: 17,814

    Squablow
    Member

    Jeff Norwell put a 4 speed in a '57 Ford and used the original column shifter, repurposing an overdrive cable to operate reverse gear, and apparently it works really well, so a 4 speed on the original column shifter is apparently not out of the question, although the trans still wouldn't be new, and either way you'll have to find a column from a manual trans car.

    I don't remember if this is the right build thread, he's got another '57 going on so you'd have to look.

    https://www.jalopyjournal.com/forum/threads/57-ford-build-2-glutton-for-punishment.1245146/

    Good info on hooking up a non 3 speed to the original stick column.
     
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  13. Fabulous50's
    Joined: Nov 18, 2017
    Posts: 513

    Fabulous50's
    Member
    from Maine

    I have a 59 Galaxie which had a 2 speed auto in it. I put a 3+OD 1978 Granada transmission in it.

    If you have a chev in your Galaxie, well you'll have to look elsewhere for suggestions.

    I put a Ford manual colum in it, the auto won't work. As @squirrel said, the pre 1965ish Ford colum shifts are very well made and robust. It is not a floor shift, but it'll never jamb up like all the stamped steel crap colum shifts did.

    You'll need a bell housing pedals and clutch linkage. I had a new driveshaft made as the manual was 4" shorter than the auto, so I need a driveshaft that was 4" longer with the correct 28 slpine slip yolk for my chosen manual. 20210320_194634.jpg
    20210313_131201.jpg
     
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  14. It would help if we knew what motor you have. You won't find any 'new' three speeds, but good used units are still out there. Finding the manual column will probably be the toughest part. As several have mentioned, the Ford linkage in that era was very good and rebuild parts (bushings) are available.
     
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  15. alanp561
    Joined: Oct 1, 2017
    Posts: 5,042

    alanp561
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    '62 Falcon. Column shifter worked just fine as long as you could keep the shifter stalk in the column. Making shifts, you had to actually shove the stalk into the column and keep pressure on it while you shifted. Solved the problem with an El Cheapo floor shift.
     
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  16. Zombilly!
    Joined: Jul 17, 2020
    Posts: 6

    Zombilly!

    It’s my only car thats on the road right now, i need to swap the engine out and i cant find a BP ford anywhere. In fact a 383 is all that is available right now.
     
  17. Ned Ludd
    Joined: May 15, 2009
    Posts: 5,231

    Ned Ludd
    Member

    Probably not widely available in your neck of the woods — they're all over the place here — but there is a side-shift Toyota 5-speed specifically for minibuses with dash-mounted shifters. It's a strong 'box too, stronger than the W5* derivative it replaced, and that was already usefully stout.

    It shifts on the right side of the case, though. In any event, making up a linkage is going to take some head-scratching and lateral thinking.
     
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  18. Ned Ludd
    Joined: May 15, 2009
    Posts: 5,231

    Ned Ludd
    Member

    It's called an R351 and it looks like this:
    [​IMG]
    Note the way the rear mounting bolts to where the rear/top-shift version's shifter goes.

    Not sure if they're in anything sold in North America, though, as I said.
     
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  19. Kerrynzl
    Joined: Jun 20, 2010
    Posts: 3,280

    Kerrynzl
    Member

    The top mount was for Toyota Dyna [Toyoace] Cab over trucks.
    The Toyota Hiace Van gearbox can swap internals with the Toyota Hilux and Supra.

    We swapped casings on a Hilux race truck to convert to cable shift [this was needed because of the huge engine set back we ran]
    We use a Hiace van cable floor shift instead mounted on the engine cover ["dog house"] instead of using the more common Hiace column shift.

    They are tough gearboxes
     
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  20. :eek::eek::eek:
     
  21. 51504bat
    Joined: May 22, 2010
    Posts: 5,184

    51504bat
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Not sure about the pedal assembly in your Galaxie but back in HS I converted my '65 Falcon 2 dr. wagon from an automatic to a stick. I had the complete pedal assembly from a Comet so it was a bolt in job. BUT there was a big ass spring for the clutch pedal that mounted in the bracket under the dash. Somehow this no nothing kid managed to get the spring stretched to hook it to the mounting hooks without loosing any fingers. Years later my old boss did the same conversion in a Ranchero.. He stretched the spring before installing it and inserted flat washers between the coils of the stretched spring so he could slip it in the bracket. He then proceeded to remove the washers so the spring could return to the correct tension. Apparently some of the washers didn't come completely out because for sometime after wards a washer would fall out on his foot when he pushed in the clutch. Just a thought it you have a spring issue involved in the conversion. Or not.
     
  22. So time is an issue cause you need it running?
    To do the SBC, now your building mounts, rounding up brackets, radiator, locating a trans plus all the other stuff.
    What engine is in it now?
     
    Last edited: Jul 14, 2022
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  23. If it’s got a 352, a 390 would fall right in.
    Personally speaking, id take a 352 -390 over a sbc.
    If it’s a 292, we’ll, Ive swapped one for a 350 once.
     
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  24. indyjps
    Joined: Feb 21, 2007
    Posts: 5,386

    indyjps
    Member

    Just rambling thoughts here.

    If time is short, ford drivetrain may be best solution.
    There's a lot of little things that will snag you up on a sbc with manual trans, going into a ford. Starter, headers, oil pan, fuel pump clearances, how's your wiring skills?

    If you go manual trans on column, having a donor car or all the parts is key, not only from availability, but to see how it's all set up. Linkage from ford column to trans with chevy ? If the chevy conversion moves the engine forward or rearward, could be alignment issues. Floor shift would definitely take some complexity out to get it driving.
     
  25. A 4 speed on the column in a 59 Ford is no big deal. You just have to be able to think past the Factory instructions. 59 was the second year for 3 speed automatic trans if you had 332 or 352. Y-Block was still a 2 speed auto. Pending you round up mating parts you should be very capable of doing the change over on any 2 day weekend no matter what motor is in it now as long as it's still FORD.
     
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  26. P.S. If you're installing a S.B.C in it you deserve all the headaches in store for you.
     
  27. Jeff Norwell
    Joined: Aug 20, 2003
    Posts: 15,064

    Jeff Norwell
    MODERATOR
    Staff Member

    I did it in one of my 57's.. not difficult. 4 speed on the column..... using All Ford Parts.... TOPLOADER
     
  28. I'll add to this and say, I have done this several times with 1957/58 Factory Ford parts.
     
  29. You are correct mostly. There are no modern 3 speeds if you consider modern to be newer than the '80s. In the late '80s ford was making a 1 ton van with an injected 300" 6 and a 3 on the tree. The tranny was full syncro and pretty stout.

    You do need a manual column. There is no way to convert the automatic column. But you can go 4 gear with a 3 on the tree column. Your reverser needs to be a separate lever. You can do that through the floor or under the dash using a handle like an E brake handle. You have to know a little bit how to drive. you must be in neutral before trying to engage the reverser.

    Now for my official disclaimer.
    Someone is going to say that it cannot be done (this is not directed at my friend @Moriarity he is actually extremely intelligent), just because you can't do it does not mean it cannot be done. I have done it before (1962 unibody Ford pickup).
     
  30. Fabulous50's
    Joined: Nov 18, 2017
    Posts: 513

    Fabulous50's
    Member
    from Maine

    If you have a Chevy engine/ manual trans from a donor, well then just do a floor shift. You'll have to figure out the clutch linkage, which is pretty straight forward. And motor mounts, driveshaft, all the rest that goes with it.

    Honestly, I think most GM engines in other makes with automatics are just done out of not having to figure out clutch and a shift cable to an aftermarket floor shifter to make it look like a real man's car with a manual.....

    But I digress.....
     
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