It was operator error. See further down the thread.
I can't get the trans to bolt to the motor. I don't remember the 901 being this much of a pain in the butt. The motor is a stock 1984 Euro 3.2 motor with stock injection.
The trans is a 1986 US 915 gear box with a 916 kit. I can get the clutch arm fork to slide into the throwout bearing, but the trans does not want to go all the way in. I cannot find anything that it is hitting on. The trans is in neutral and the main shaft spins. Is there some other secret to this besides the clutch fork? I was thinking about laying the motor on its face to give me more leverage with the trans. Is this a dumb idea?
Anybody live close by that can give me a hand? Beer, barbeque, etc...
I think my back is giving out again..
I live in Laguna Niguel.
did you use a clutch alignment tool ?? OR did you do the opposite of Eric and put the wrong spline disc in ??
Thanks for the tip!!
Its a stock 915 clutch kit from Zimms. I used the clutch alignment tool that came with the kit and even eye balled it to make sure it was perfectly centered. The clutch tool easily slides in and out and has splines on it.
I always installed the T.O. bearing on the trans shaft with the fork engaged, then installed the trans onto the motor. Maybe I am just looking at your pics wrong?
yeah, what Bulitt said. If you put the throwout bearning on the tranny shaft with the clutch fork engaged first that could make a difference. Not sure why, it may make a difference, I'd suspect it might have something to do the fork binding. It's different than the 901 and looks like it could be a tight fit.
This is a 915 trans not a 914/901 trans. The throw out bearing mounts to the pressure plate. It's a 225mm pull type clutch versus the 215mm push type 901 clutch. Thanks for the help though!!!
It was operator error. I posted the problem on the Pelican 911 technical forum and they knew exactly what the problem was. The 915 trans is allot pickier than the 901/914 trans due to the pull type clutch. It is a really tight fit and both the engine and trans have to be level. I used boards to level the motor and used a floor jack to get the right height on the trans. The trans slid right in like butter, but i still had to have the trans in gear and turn the drive shafts forward to get the splines to line up. Pretty frustrating!! Ah well live and learn..
Looking fantastic. Hey one question, who worked on the conversion and how much dd it set you back for the machine work?
You can pm me the cost.
Thanks
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