1961 slim jim rebuilder
Here it is, ready to go. take a look
http://sfbay.craigslist.org/sby/pts/1052620843.html
http://sfbay.craigslist.org/sby/pts/1052620843.html
POS or not, it is what came in 1961-64 Oldsmobiles and if you have any sense of restoration, that is what you will keep in it.
Beside, by the time you go thru all the trouble and expense of changing the car to a later transmission, you'll have the same money in the job and you'll always have a bastard car.
A lot of the trouble with Slim Jims is nobody knows how to service them and nobody wants to learn how. Yes, they have their issues. Yes, those issues can be overcome.
When a transmission guy who does Torqueflites or PowerGlides, or even 200-4Rs tells me he can't do anything for a Slim Jim, I call BS. SJ works off the same principle all those transmissions do, by throttle valve position. No need to tell me you can understand an electronic transmission with a hundred inputs to the car's computer and then tell me you can't understand a fluid coupling transmission. The biggest reason nobody wants to touch one is because they don't want to warranty it.
Chicago, your guy is Tom Kasper at A-1 Transmissions in Elgin.
Beside, by the time you go thru all the trouble and expense of changing the car to a later transmission, you'll have the same money in the job and you'll always have a bastard car.
A lot of the trouble with Slim Jims is nobody knows how to service them and nobody wants to learn how. Yes, they have their issues. Yes, those issues can be overcome.
When a transmission guy who does Torqueflites or PowerGlides, or even 200-4Rs tells me he can't do anything for a Slim Jim, I call BS. SJ works off the same principle all those transmissions do, by throttle valve position. No need to tell me you can understand an electronic transmission with a hundred inputs to the car's computer and then tell me you can't understand a fluid coupling transmission. The biggest reason nobody wants to touch one is because they don't want to warranty it.
Chicago, your guy is Tom Kasper at A-1 Transmissions in Elgin.
The biggest reason nobody wants to touch one is because they
I had a Slim Jim in my 64 98. It wasn't a good transmission.
As far as "restoring" a car goes, if you are really "restoring" a car to win shows and trophies then of course you don't want to put in a different transmission. Personally, I couldn't care less about keeping a car original.
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fv64olds98
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Jan 20, 2014 09:57 AM




