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Hot Rods Inland Tool Shifter

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by earlymopar, Jan 15, 2021.

  1. earlymopar
    Joined: Feb 26, 2007
    Posts: 1,609

    earlymopar
    Member

    I'm sifting through things for my brother's estate and ran across this Inland Tool shifter. I know a little about them but I've had difficulty trying to find actual details on model #s, etc. Anyone have any references for these or can point me in the right direction?

    20210114_132320 (2).jpg 20210114_132416 (2).jpg 20210114_132423 (2).jpg 20210114_132438 (2).jpg
     
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  2. 41rodderz
    Joined: Sep 27, 2010
    Posts: 6,541

    41rodderz
    Member
    from Oregon

    I am thinking they were installed in cheap models with a manual trans ‘60’s ,’70’s . Performance muscle cars would get a Hurst.
     
  3. DDDenny
    Joined: Feb 6, 2015
    Posts: 19,243

    DDDenny
    Member
    from oregon

    The rods look like they are each progressively longer than each other, first thoughts are Saginaw, maybe Monza, that boot looks oem(ish).
    Pretty sure ITM made shifters for various oem applications.
     
  4. Boneyard51
    Joined: Dec 10, 2017
    Posts: 6,451

    Boneyard51
    Member

    They were standard equipment on a lot of Chevys, in the sixties! I bought one a couple of years ago at a junk store and inquired about them!
    They look like good shifters.





    Bones 199DFE40-7833-47D0-84CD-673CACC4C9C8.jpeg 30979102-F7DA-4227-84C7-5BA1BAF7E9CE.jpeg
     
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  5. dwollam
    Joined: Oct 22, 2012
    Posts: 2,345

    dwollam
    Member

    Bones, yours looks like a Mopar shifter. They used them too.

    Dave
     
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  6. DDDenny
    Joined: Feb 6, 2015
    Posts: 19,243

    DDDenny
    Member
    from oregon

    Looks to be GM (B) body Greg, maybe late 70's.
     
  7. Boneyard51
    Joined: Dec 10, 2017
    Posts: 6,451

    Boneyard51
    Member

    Wow! Thanks! I just inquired about the Inland Tool shifter and it took me to Chevrolet! I hope it is a MoPar shifter, should be more valuable than a Chevy!






    Bones
     
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  8. BJR
    Joined: Mar 11, 2005
    Posts: 9,896

    BJR
    Member

    Why would you want to shift your inland tool? Pants too tight?
     
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  9. Fordors
    Joined: Sep 22, 2016
    Posts: 5,409

    Fordors
    Member

    B71E3C0F-6AF5-4904-830A-AADCCECDDB0B.jpeg
    Looks like @DDDenny nailed it, lay it out with the shift levers to match this side cover. The span between 3-4 and
    1-2 is 3 11/16” and 1-2 and reverse is
    1 3/16”.
     
  10. earlymopar
    Joined: Feb 26, 2007
    Posts: 1,609

    earlymopar
    Member

    Thanks Doug, Fordors. I was pretty certain it was Chevy but was not clear on the approximate year. Wow, 70's era is later than I thought. I knew it wasn't Mopar as most if not all of those had the reverse lock-out (T-lever). I did think it was unique that it appears to mount on the side of the side of the transmission (floor) hump. Now that you say that, my brother did have a 78-ish El Camino with a 4 speed. Perhaps this was the factory piece and he swapped to a Hurst set up......?
     
    Last edited: Jan 15, 2021
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  11. My early production '68 Road Runner 4 speed had an Inland shifter. Broke one lever twice, can't imagine how!
     
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  12. earlymopar
    Joined: Feb 26, 2007
    Posts: 1,609

    earlymopar
    Member

    383 car? Those were a lot of fun!
     
  13. low down A
    Joined: Feb 6, 2009
    Posts: 500

    low down A
    Member

    yea mopar used them until 68, your's is not mopar look on ebay tons of them you can't hardly give them away and if you ever tried to shift a high reving motor with one you would no why JUNK
     
  14. oldiron 440
    Joined: Dec 12, 2018
    Posts: 3,320

    oldiron 440
    Member

    I think mopar used them on the OD 4 speed in the 70s.
     
  15. DDDenny
    Joined: Feb 6, 2015
    Posts: 19,243

    DDDenny
    Member
    from oregon

  16. finn
    Joined: Jan 25, 2006
    Posts: 1,289

    finn
    Member

    68 Roadrunner had them.
     
  17. DDDenny
    Joined: Feb 6, 2015
    Posts: 19,243

    DDDenny
    Member
    from oregon

    I'm recalling those and the later Hurst pistol grip shifters have quite convoluted handles on them compared to this one.
     
    Last edited: Jan 15, 2021
  18. Starlinerdude
    Joined: Mar 6, 2008
    Posts: 176

    Starlinerdude
    Member
    from Washington

    The were commonly used on 2nd generation GM F-bodies (camaro,f-bird)also along with a lot of other rigs.
     
  19. deathrowdave
    Joined: May 27, 2014
    Posts: 3,544

    deathrowdave
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from NKy

    Inland is a good good company . I have a couple of them . They are top shelf stuff .
     
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  20. earlymopar
    Joined: Feb 26, 2007
    Posts: 1,609

    earlymopar
    Member

  21. Elcohaulic
    Joined: Dec 27, 2017
    Posts: 2,213

    Elcohaulic

    Is that the shifter Grumpy Jenkins used? It was an off brand from some little shop in Pa.. They said the action was like an expensive Swiss time piece
     
  22. southcross2631
    Joined: Jan 20, 2013
    Posts: 4,413

    southcross2631
    Member

    It was the first thing we changed when we started racing them. They hung up when you are really racing hard.
     
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  23. DDDenny
    Joined: Feb 6, 2015
    Posts: 19,243

    DDDenny
    Member
    from oregon

    He also used the P&G shifter from another little shop in Portland Oregon.
     
  24. Mr48chev
    Joined: Dec 28, 2007
    Posts: 33,948

    Mr48chev
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    They were commonly used on a lot of cars but more often than not got replaced with a Hurst after the car owner got tired of the sloppy shifting. A buddy gave me one years ago that he had replaced with a Hurst that I used on a three speed in a car I had then. We just moved the reverse lever to reverse position and tied it down with bailing wire and bingo it was a still sloppy but free three speed floor shift. It was still better than the horrid excuse for a shifter that came with the car though.
     
  25. finn
    Joined: Jan 25, 2006
    Posts: 1,289

    finn
    Member

    It the 68, and, if I recall, not the 69, either.

    By 70 they had bends for the pistol grip.
     
  26. earlymopar
    Joined: Feb 26, 2007
    Posts: 1,609

    earlymopar
    Member

    What year do you think P&G went out of business? I have one of the "P&G Gappers" for setting valve clearances on solid lifter engines. I think they were pretty innovative for the time.
     
  27. DDDenny
    Joined: Feb 6, 2015
    Posts: 19,243

    DDDenny
    Member
    from oregon

    I don't know Greg but I bet the boys in Warminster puckered a little the first time they saw those P&G shifter decals on Grumpys' car!
     
  28. earlymopar
    Joined: Feb 26, 2007
    Posts: 1,609

    earlymopar
    Member

    Ha. No doubt. I think I'll do a little digging on P&G history!
     
  29. earlymopar
    Joined: Feb 26, 2007
    Posts: 1,609

    earlymopar
    Member


    I forgot to ask....what transmission/s does this side cover fit?
     
  30. Fordors
    Joined: Sep 22, 2016
    Posts: 5,409

    Fordors
    Member

    I didn’t mention it, as DDDenny already had, but it is a Saginaw, it was introduced in ‘66 and I guess GM used them for 15 or 20 years. Best suited to low horse engines, won’t take a lot of torque.
    Sorry for the oversight.
     

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