It had major rust and wiring issues so a little over a year ago, I bought a 72 F100 2WD 360/C6 Long Bed for parts.
Shortly afterwards I spent 8-10 months swapping cabs, wiring harnesses and anything else I could salvage from the donor truck (the 72) over to my 70.
All of this was done in my back yard working on week ends with limited time/money and tools.
Twas a lot of work but I was glad to have done it.
After all of that, I began driving my truck again on a daily basis back and forth to work as I had to rely on it for basic transportation.
Anyway, on the the transmission saga....
In the 5 plus years that I have owned my truck I had very few problems with the transmission. It did exhibit the standard tired C6 symptoms of a well used automatic transmission but never left me stranded or problematic to drive in traffic.
It used to have the normal (for a tired tranny) cold start slow to drop into gear kinda slushy shift signs plus it leaked fluid in the driveway when parked there hot.
All stuff that I knew I needed to fix but figured Id do it when I got around to it.
It didnt help much that I drove the piss out of that transmission and pulled anything that I could hook to the trailer hitch including the 72 Donor truck I already mentioned in this post.
I had a floor shifter so even in my normal daily driving I force shifted that poor transmission like a manual valve body and generally abused it more than I should have because it was just fun to drive it that way. Plus - I didnt mind knowing that I was tearing up that existing transmission because then I would have an excuse to finally swap in the spare transmission that I had in my garage from the 72 donor truck. (I had saved it because the PO told me it was good)
Welp - the time finally came when that poor abused transmission started showing its wear. It started shuddering and began make strange noises when /if it decided to shift. Thats when I knew its time had come.
The process of this destruction was about 8-9 months of solid abuse.
No big deal. ( I thought)
I had no business abusing a truck that I relied on for daily transportation like that but like I said I had the spare tranny in the home garage and Im fortunate enough to work at an automotive dealership where we have free use of the shop on week ends. The only rule is that you have to clean up after yourself and you cant have anything left on the rack come the following Monday.
So I bought a new C6 filter kit, a case of type F fluid and a new front and rear seal and then loaded up the spare transmission into the bed of the truck for a trip to the shop so I could swap them out and have my truck back in working order by Saturday afternoon at the latest.
I limped the truck up there and used the pressure washer to clean up the spare transmission before starting the transplant.
Then I racked my truck and began the process of removing the bad tranny. Pretty basic stuff. Within 45 minutes I had the drive shaft out, the torque converter nuts off and all of the bellhousing bolts out and the transmission jack under it when I discovered that the lift that the whole truck was sitting 5&1/2 feet in the air on was interfering with me removing the bolts of the front crossmember.
The problem was that the rack I was using isnt designed for an 8 foot bed 3/4 ton truck, their actually only supposed to fit a compact or midsized car.
So I had to spend the next 45 minutes re-positioning and re-racking everything to continue the extraction of the old transmission.
After that - I could continue removing the front crossmember for the first time in my trucks 37 years of existence. Needless to say, A large hammer was in order because they are really wedged in there even after you remove all of the next to impossible to get to bolts.
Finally - the old tranny was out and the bolt on yoke was removed. Thats when I realized that I had never tried the bolt on 3/4 ton yoke on the splines of the 1/2 ton donor transmission. I began to get nervous.
It proved to be a non issue as it turned out to be a direct swap and I finished that task by knocking in the new rear seal and torquing down the rear yoke nut.
That done, it was time to install the new front seal, torque converter, and filter. No problems there as the donor tranny was on the ground in front of the still racked truck. I didnt care for the condition of the old fluid in the donor transmission but remembered that the previous owner of my donor truck told me it was good and figured it was too late for me to turn back now. Time was running down before the shop was gonna be locked up with or without me still in it and Ill be damed if I was gonna go thru all of this just to put the same bad tranny back in my truck.
So in the truck went the donor transmission with new seals and a new filter kit and pan gasket.
No problems - just the normal aggravation of re-installing the drive shaft, tranny lines, shifter linkage, bellhousing bolts. and lining up then re-tightening the torque converter bolts. Not to mention persuading the crossmember back in with a hammer and skinning a few knuckles re-tightening the top bolts of the crossmember to the frame.
Satisfied that all was done I cleaned up and put away the transmission jack and let the truck down off the lift. Put about 4 quarts of new fluid in it and started her up. After idling a few minutes I checked the fluid level, added another quart, then began moving the shifter to cycle the valve body thru the foreward and reverse gears so I could check and correct the fluid level again before taking a test drive. (I was feeling happy with myself)
Thats when I discovered that when I moved the shifter to reverse, the truck dropped into what felt like drive. (or at least a foreward gear not a reverse gear)
No big deal. (I thought) I must just have the linkage adjusted off or something.
![Embarassed :oops:](./images/smilies/icon_redface.gif)
No dice - I checked - re-checked and triple checked everything and could come up with no reason the truck only had a foreward gear no matter what gear I selected with the shifter. Something was obviously wrong.
So here I was - all alone in the shop and running out of time to get out of there before it got locked up. Knowing that if my truck was still on the rack by Monday morning I was going to be in trouble with my boss not to mention teased by the technicians that I worked with for not being able to complete a simple job like swapping out a transmission in an old truck like mine.
What to do.......
I finished cleaning up the mess I made on the shop floor. Put the original bad tranny in the bed of my truck and pushed it out of the shop into the parking lot before the shop was locked up. With about 30 minutes to spare.
I called my wife to come pick me up from the shop and made arrangements to trailer my truck back home the next day. ( I wasnt happy any more)
*** Story continued in the next post *******