I seem to remember years ago reading a magazine article about installing the overdrive unit from a Saginaw 3-speed into a Saginaw 4-speed. Anybody know anything about that, or did I dream it. Thanks.
Yes there were articles about it. If I remember correctly you needed to change out the longer main shaft from the 3 spd. and put it in the 4spd.
I have a sag four speed and a sag three speed overdrive. I thought about doing the conversion. I think the floor shifter could be a bit of a hassell
I know a couple of guys with them, installed behind BBC 427's. Not too sure how much abuse they might actually take.
Most of them were R10 on the Chevys. Not real strong. you might also want to drill the case for the reverse lockout rod.
Yeah, that was in an issue of Hot Rod that had one of Richard Petty's stock cars on the cover. Probably in the mid 70s. I think the same article appeared in a truck magazine later on, probably a Peterson publication.
I do not know about the sag 4spOD conversion but I have a BW T-10 overdrive conversion in my 34 Ford pick-up. It was made by a man named TOM BEATTY. My trans is a 1962 BW T10 with a Ford BW OD tail shaft on the rear. It is 39 inches long. It has 8 forward gear and is shifted with lever and a button between lever shifts. Gears are close and I use button most in first or fourth. OD can be locked out with a lever and trans can be used as a standard 4 sp. It is unusual and a 5 sp or 6sp would work out better.
Probably not much use to you, but a few guys put the BW T-11 o/d behind the Ford top loaders from the mid 60’s. What I’ve read the first top loaders were based on the BW T-85 case, with the reverse gear added on. I think the T-85/R-11 was used as the base trans all the way thru the 406 motors. Today the cost of a T-11 and the machining would be more than a TKO-500 unless you can do all the work yourself. The R-10 units in Ford’s were usually (later models) behind the T-86 trans. Ok, but abuse will break them pretty quick.
That was the top option through to the '61 390/401HP, replaced with the T10 in '62 when the 406 came in. Ford wasn't happy with either trans and B/W wouldn't upgrade them as per Ford's request, which is what led to the development of the toploader.
Go to chevytrucks.org; that's the article you need for the conversion. Just look in the tech forum. I am Butch/56sedandelivery.
Like mentioned above, it can be done. Remove the three speed gears from the B-W main shaft and replace with the gears from the 4-speed main shaft. Hole for reverse lock out, optional. If you want the feature you will need to modify the reverse shifter fork. Fabricate a shifter mounting bracket and make some shifter rods. Wire up the solenoid, governor, and kickdown switch. The kickdown switch is a momentary ground, so you can make something up vs the "factory" style if you prefer. Up side, the transmission will bolt up to your existing four-speed crossmember. And you can use the same hole in the floor for the shifter.
Thanks Butch. I went to chevytrucks.org and the link labeled Overdrive/MPG is dead. Several other links on their Technical Area are dead. I will look some more later. Thanks.
It was the 1975 issue with the Petty charger on the cover, don’t remember the month. Sent from my iPhone using The H.A.M.B. mobile app
The conversion was detailed very well in the March 2014 issue of Hot Rod Deluxe. Oh wait, I forgot. A lot of you guys have no use for print publications.
I'll disagree with the 'rugged' description (unless you're talking about a four-pinion R11 unit, but those are very rare). I've killed these behind a bone-stock 223 Ford six more than once. But they do make for a fabulous cruising trans if treated with care and installed with all factory hook-ups.
One of the alliance member here on the hamb ‘s brother wrote this article on it for hot rod deluxe. Garage motor sports shop built it . I too built one after their article & love it. I bought another side cover & he had traced it out so I could cut it out so I could gauge where to weld the new fabricated curve onto reverse lever to engage it & prevent “rolling off “ . Great article titled how to get gone with detailed pics . Flux Here’s end result If you consider going this route, also be aware there’s no where to mount the shifter. You can go to my slow moving build thread (53 150 Build) to see pics & description of how I fabricated the hurst shifter off a Muncie 4 speed to work on it . Flux
I didn't remember seeing that article in Hot Rod Deluxe. I'm usually pretty good at recollecting, especially with a hint. Just checked my library; missing that issue. At least I know I'm not losing it. Yet!
My question was asked because I am interested in putting a Saginaw 4-speed behind a 235-6 in a Chevy A-D pickup. Remember Patrick Dykes torque-tube conversion? I would swap rear axles for an open drive with 4.11 or so gears, limited-slip preferred. With a 3.50 first gear and 4.11 rear it should have enough torque to start with a heavy-ish load or trailer. And with the OD, it could cruise 65-70 lightly loaded without a strain. Thanks again to all.
Thanks Heap. Am I looking at your image correctly? Is that a Sag 4-spd with Overdrive? What do you run this in? What engine? Thanks.
Yes, Saginaw 4-speed and Borg-Warner R-10. This is in my '57 Chevy behind a 327. I put a 3.50 in the rear when I had the Muncie installed, I think I should lower the gear now. The shifter mount is forked to allow for the "hump" on the B-W unit. The shifter rods were cobbled together from some pieces I got off of eBay. You will need to move the shifter back to allow for the speedometer cable. Instead of a kickdown switch, I have a momentary ground button on the shifter knob. The 6-2 and 8-7 connections on the DPDT relay are normally closed. When the governor grounds, the 87-30 connections close to energize the solenoid. If the lever on the OD unit is in the correct position, then the transmission goes into overdrive. Pressing the shifter switch closes 5-3 and the OD is cut out.