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WC Mustang T5 S10 Tailshaft Conversion

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by Scotch Buzzard King, Dec 5, 2010.

  1. What does it take to convert a WC Mustang T5 with a S10 T5 tailshaft? I was reading on another post that I would have to change the bearing in the tailshaft to the Mustangs', but that's all I have found.
     
  2. bttt. Come on. Really? So many of you tell me to stay Ford, and then you can't give me an answer?
     
  3. brady1929
    Joined: Sep 30, 2006
    Posts: 9,627

    brady1929
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    i can tell you about chevy but not ford. so a btt will have to do.
     
  4. bobscogin
    Joined: Feb 8, 2007
    Posts: 1,797

    bobscogin
    Member

    GM yokes have 27 splines and Ford have 28, so I'd suspect the Ford yoke may have a different OD. That would necessitate a different bushing and seal. In addition to the tailshaft housing you'll need the S-10 trans top cover, or at the least the shorter shift rails. Getting a working speedo will probably require some innovative mix and match, and will vary depending on whether mechanical or electric.

    Bob
     
  5. Judd
    Joined: Feb 26, 2003
    Posts: 1,894

    Judd
    Member

  6. I did this about 8 months ago for a friend. The shift bar has to be swapped from the chev to ford to fit the chev housing. The ford output shaft has the speedo gear in a different spot and I could not machine the hardened shaft for a spacer. I built up the shaft with JB W
     
  7. Could you elaborate? Did you use the whole Chevy housing, or just the tailhousing?
     
  8. Got distracted sorry. I built up the shaft with JB Weld, turn it down and cut a new keyway for the gear clip. There was something with the rear countershaft bearing but I don't remember. It should be in the journal article though.
     
  9. Just the chevy rear housing.
     
  10. Cool. And the JB weld worked? I have a friend that fixed his threads on a glow plug with JB weld. It was on a Jetta diesel, and he bored the hole out with a dremel. He then took a plug that matched the thread on the glow plug, and he put it into the hole with JB weld around it. He then baked it in his stove for ten hours at 450 degrees. The crazy thing is that it worked. He has never had a problem with it.
     

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