I wonder if anyone could tell me what year this shifter was introduced and is it all that rare? I had one from the late 70's but the cover was different. This one is more rounded on the corners and does'nt have reverse lock out. Thanks, Tom
B&M Quick-Click. Wont pass tech at most tracks, but if your building a "gasser", thats probably not important. Think I probably have 4-5 of them so I dont know if I would call them rare. Made throughout the '70s and well into the eighties.
Ya I did quite abit of drag racing in the 80's & 90's so I know it would'nt pass tech. But a street gasser is what I'm building now. I gotta ask what your doin with 5 of these things? Gonna sell them some day? Put them into cars? P.S. Is this the very first version of a Quick Click?
I really dont like them, honestly they are rather cheaply made. two of them were in cars I bought back in the day, I replaced one of them with a series 60, and one with a Fairbanks shifter, WAY nicer piece. Not sure if theres 4 of them or 5, I would have to dig through my stash, one came in a box of old Stewart Warner gauges I bought at a swap meet years ago, mostly because there was a nice SW cable tach in the box and a couple of old "green stripes". It was one of those "Take the whole box for $50" deals, IIRC there were also a couple of old sun gauges, and a Stewart Warner 150 mph speedo. Probably $350/$400 worth of stuff, a real steal. Couple others just kind of turned up, cant really remember now, I do some head porting and stuff, sometimes guys would give me boxes of parts & so on. PS. Yes, as far as I know.
I wouldn't use one on a ford or mopar product, like most "universal' shifters the distance between reverse and park is incorrect for a ford or mopar trans, and the park pin wont fully engage. I have seen cars at the track with "universal" shifters roll down the trailer ramps with the park pin clacking.
PS. Yes, as far as I know.[/QUOTE] I figure this one has to be very early issue due to the style of the cover and the straight stick. Maybe this is the next one in line after the series-60. I did see one with the later cover and without the rev lock out. So I believe there were at least 3 versions. I'd just like to pin down the year. Could they have made these in the late 1960's? Anyone got a really old catolog? p.s. I'm aware of the park paw problem.
I'll see what I can come up with. I am thinking '71-'72 here, but the older I get, the less I should think...
The Series 60 and the quick-click were both available new at the same time, but the Series 60 originally came out long before the Quick-Click, but you probably know that.
i was looking for one about a year ago, actually found 4 gave 2 away for street gasser projects have one in my nova period correct but as said here before wont pass teck but look great .i actually have the next version looks like the one you have pictured but the handleis slightly curved and has a red reverse lockout.anyway i am looking for the shift ball that has B/M in it if any one has one id love to buy it and i may be interested in selling the shifter i spoke of thanks oh almost forgot i believe it was built in 1974 or 1975
I had ten of those on a floor mount tower as a gear selector for Allison Mt-40 series transmissions on our fire engines in 1962. They were provide by B & M directly to the chassis manufacturer who was Crown Fire Coach in Los Angeles. Normbc9