The 1947 - Present Chevrolet & GMC Truck Message Board Network







Register or Log In To remove these advertisements.

Go Back   The 1947 - Present Chevrolet & GMC Truck Message Board Network > 47 - Current classic GM Trucks > The 1967 - 1972 Chevrolet & GMC Pickups Message Board

Web 67-72chevytrucks.com


Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 12-22-2018, 01:01 PM   #1
Sawlog
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jun 2017
Location: Central illinois
Posts: 143
Would you change rear gear?

I just put my new motor in my 69 c10. A also put a 2000 stall in.
My plan was to change the rear 3.07 gear to 3.42 with posi next.
With the new motor and stall, I can now honestly smoke my one wheel peal from a 20 mile an hour roll all the way into 2nd gear. My old set up would fall on its face.
So.. now I'm not sure I need to change gears. It doesn't sound like I need much help on the low end like I thought I would. What do you think?
Sawlog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-22-2018, 01:10 PM   #2
Steeveedee
Who Changed This?
 
Steeveedee's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Simi Valley, CA
Posts: 10,261
Re: Would you change rear gear?

You might change your mind with more traction. See if you can borrow wider tires to experiment with. It does look like you have enough torque, though. Are you towing anything with it?
__________________
~Steven

'70 Chevy 3/4T Longhorn CST 402/400/3.56 Custom Camper

Simi Valley, CA
Steeveedee is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 12-22-2018, 01:18 PM   #3
Sawlog
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jun 2017
Location: Central illinois
Posts: 143
Re: Would you change rear gear?

No towing, I have 31 10.50s on the rear
Sawlog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-22-2018, 01:24 PM   #4
ElKotze
Registered User
 
ElKotze's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2014
Location: Southwest Kansas
Posts: 306
Re: Would you change rear gear?

I wouldn't change it. I have 3.07's in my '68 and I love it, great on the highway if you have enough motor to push it.
__________________
'64 C10 LWB, 283, 5speed
'68 C20 LWB, 327, 4speed
'69 C20 Custom Camper Longhorn, 350, 4speed
'72 C20 Cheyenne Super, 396, TH400
'66 C60, 292, 4speed
ElKotze is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-22-2018, 01:30 PM   #5
jocko
Senior Member
 
jocko's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Godley, TX
Posts: 17,940
Re: Would you change rear gear?

Cruising the highways comfortably (rpm-wise) and being burnout king are pretty much mutually exclusive endeavors without an overdrive trans. Right now, you are probably enjoying the reasonable highway rpm more than you realize. 3.42 won't be too bad on the highway, but will be higher rpm than 3.07, a great highway ratio.

The question is: what is your goal (burnouts) and is reaching it worth the sacrifices at the other end of the rpm band? 3.07 to 3.42 isn't a very drastic change and neither is a very deep 1st gear for burnouts, to be honest. Tire smoking is usually reserved for 3.73 and higher numerical ratios (lower gearing) depending on your engine, of course.

So, what is your goal? If burnouts only and you don't care about highway rpm, then I'd jump straight to a 3.73. What is your budget? Is there funding for an O/D trans AND a gear swap? If so, a TH700R4 or TH2004R, either with 3.73, will make your day from a dead stop AND on the highway. I'm going to assume you don't want a different trans if you just installed a new torque converter (what IS your trans, and engine, by the way?) - so if highway rpm is important to you - I'd leave it as is. If you want more umph, then 3.42 or even 3.73, depending on how much importance you place on highway rpm.

EDIT: one more point - I'd agree with Steeveedee, you're just breaking loose the one tire and then it's spinning to make your smoke - if you add a posi, it will likely take more gearing to break it loose in the first place.
jocko is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-22-2018, 01:48 PM   #6
Sawlog
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jun 2017
Location: Central illinois
Posts: 143
Re: Would you change rear gear?

My motor is a 357, tranny th400. Most of my driving is on the highway or interstate. So I do enjoy my lower rpm. I also don't want a log at take off either. My new motor dynod at 388 pounds of tourqe at 3700 rpm. What I difference this motor has made! I might have found a happy meduim with low end power and good highway rpm. Just don't want to mess it up.
Sawlog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-22-2018, 09:25 PM   #7
Mike C
Registered User
 
Mike C's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 1999
Location: Austin, TX, USA
Posts: 7,715
Re: Would you change rear gear?

I would gear it.

Be careful with extended one wheel peals. The spider gears and side gear spin EXTREMELY fast when smokin' one tire and they will fail...
__________________
44 Willys MB
52 M38A1
64 Corvette Coupe
68 Camaro 'vert LT1 & TH700
69 Z/28 355 12.6's @110
69 Chevy Short Step 4 1/2"/7" drop
72 Jimmy 4WD 4spd 4" & 35's
02 GMC 2500HD 4x4 Duramax
Mike C is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-23-2018, 01:02 PM   #8
RichardJ
Registered User
 
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: So Cal
Posts: 1,420
Re: Would you change rear gear?

>>Tire smoking is usually reserved for 3.73 and higher numerical ratios (lower gearing) <<

That's actually backwards. Once a tire breaks loose and looses traction, it takes less power to keep it spinning. With "3.73 and higher numerical ratios" the tire is actually spinning slower so it takes less vehicle speed to match tire speed and at that point the tire matches ground speed and stops spinning.

I agree with Mike C about the spider gears. With the 3.07s the sixteen year olds will applaud now and the neighbors will applaud when you trash the rear end.
__________________
'67 GMC 2500, 292, 4spd, AC
RichardJ is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-23-2018, 08:43 PM   #9
Mike C
Registered User
 
Mike C's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 1999
Location: Austin, TX, USA
Posts: 7,715
Re: Would you change rear gear?

This is absolutely the truth. It is easier to break the tires loose with a higher numeric gear, but it is so much more easy to modulate the wheel spin. That is amplified with a traction device as well.

With 2.56, 2.73. or 3.07 gears once they start spinning they just seem to spin forever.

I just went from 3.54 open to 4.57 with a PowerTrax no slip in the back of my CJ-5 (running 33" BFG mud terrains) and it is really interesting to see how the gear made the powerband much more linear. With the 3.54 it would start off slow and really accelerate as it "came on the cam". With the 4.5's, it just goes really linearly until it quits pulling.

This is the most gear change I have done in recent history. I went from 3.07 in my Camaro to 4.56 and you talk about changing the personality of a motor.
__________________
44 Willys MB
52 M38A1
64 Corvette Coupe
68 Camaro 'vert LT1 & TH700
69 Z/28 355 12.6's @110
69 Chevy Short Step 4 1/2"/7" drop
72 Jimmy 4WD 4spd 4" & 35's
02 GMC 2500HD 4x4 Duramax
Mike C is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-23-2018, 09:07 PM   #10
jocko
Senior Member
 
jocko's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Godley, TX
Posts: 17,940
Re: Would you change rear gear?

Quote:
Originally Posted by RichardJ View Post
>>Tire smoking is usually reserved for 3.73 and higher numerical ratios (lower gearing) <<

That's actually backwards. Once a tire breaks loose and looses traction, it takes less power to keep it spinning. With "3.73 and higher numerical ratios" the tire is actually spinning slower so it take less vehicle speed to match tire speed and at that point the tire matches ground speed and stops spinning.
The key phrase there is "once a tire breaks loose". Completely understand what you're saying, and yes, once it breaks looks, 3.07 will spin the tire faster than a 4.10. But if a truck can't do a burnout in the first place - it needs a deeper gear to be able to break loose in the first place (that's what I'm talkin about). We're just talking about two consecutive, but different things. I'm talking about increasing the numerical ratio to to help a trucks engine/rear combo actually be able to break the tires loose (why I don't know), and you're talking about once they have broken loose, destroying the maximum amount of tire for the least rpm. But I DID say - "tire smoking" so, I guess I stepped right into that one, ha
jocko is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-23-2018, 09:16 PM   #11
Mike C
Registered User
 
Mike C's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 1999
Location: Austin, TX, USA
Posts: 7,715
Re: Would you change rear gear?

I don't think he was finding any fault with what you had said, just trying to add to the conversation. I've never had a vehicle with too much gear until it came time to take a 6 hour road trip...

My answer was still directed at the OP to gear it. Gear makes everything better except for highway cruising. That's what converting to OD is for after you have over geared it.

I have a 427 build for my short step and am planning on running 3.73 gears with a TH200 4R. Personally, I find the 1-2 drop with a TH700R4 to be obnoxious and I am willing to pay to not have it.

The 3.73 with the the 2.74 of the TH200 4R gives a 10.22 overall first gear and the .67 OD drops the effective final drive ratio to 2.49 which is the best of both worlds.

New cars are so much more driveable than old cars due to multispeed transmissions more than anything else IMO.
__________________
44 Willys MB
52 M38A1
64 Corvette Coupe
68 Camaro 'vert LT1 & TH700
69 Z/28 355 12.6's @110
69 Chevy Short Step 4 1/2"/7" drop
72 Jimmy 4WD 4spd 4" & 35's
02 GMC 2500HD 4x4 Duramax
Mike C is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-23-2018, 10:04 PM   #12
4carbcorvair
Registered User
 
Join Date: Feb 2018
Location: Gorham, ME
Posts: 96
Re: Would you change rear gear?

4.57 in my 68, 30mph I'm looking for another gear. LOL
__________________
68 K20 Custom Camper/CST Wrecker.
97 GMC K1500 short bed reg cab.
4carbcorvair is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-23-2018, 10:14 PM   #13
jocko
Senior Member
 
jocko's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Godley, TX
Posts: 17,940
Re: Would you change rear gear?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Mike C View Post
I don't think he was finding any fault with what you had said, just trying to add to the conversation. I've never had a vehicle with too much gear until it came time to take a 6 hour road trip....
Yup, no worries from where I'm sittin, I didn't take it that way either - just pointing to the two sides of the coin. All good!
jocko is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-23-2018, 10:32 PM   #14
WorkinLonghorn
Senior Member
 
WorkinLonghorn's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Studio City, Calif.
Posts: 2,861
Re: Would you change rear gear?

What speed do you cruise at? Is gas mileage a priority at all? How often really do you expect to light up that expensive rubber?

If you cruise 60-65 I would think about switching to 3.73. Any higher and I think your original plan for 3.54 would work.

I notice that your torque peak is at 3700 RPM. A stock 1969 350 got 355 Ft/Lbs at 3000 (315 at 2400 net rating). I cruise at about this RPM (2400) with 3.73 rear but I rarely go above 60(for safety and fuel economy reasons). -BA

The crappiest gas mileage I ever got in a carb'd SBC was with 3.07 gears and 33" tires. (~10MPG freeway)
Attached Images
 
__________________
'69 GMC C2500 Custom Camper, 8 1/2' bed, New GM 350, NP 435 Close Ratio 4spd. Trans., 3.73 Dana-60 open.Camper and Trailer wiring, PS, PB, AC, tach , three gas tanks, 2nd owner, Work-Truck supreme. Best $300 I ever spent.
WorkinLonghorn is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-23-2018, 11:22 PM   #15
KQQL IT
At the body shop.
 
KQQL IT's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Land of fruits and nuts.
Posts: 5,185
Re: Would you change rear gear?

Unless you're drag racing it, and it pulls the current gear. I'd leave it alone.
Last time I went from 3.08 to 3.73 and hated it until I went to the dragstrip.
__________________
" That didnt make it any newer "
" Dont antique the equipment "
KQQL IT is online now   Reply With Quote
Old 12-24-2018, 12:18 AM   #16
Sawlog
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jun 2017
Location: Central illinois
Posts: 143
Re: Would you change rear gear?

Quote:
Originally Posted by WorkinLonghorn View Post
What speed do you cruise at? Is gas mileage a priority at all? How often really do you expect to light up that expensive rubber?

If you cruise 60-65 I would think about switching to 3.73. Any higher and I think your original plan for 3.54 would work.

I notice that your torque peak is at 3700 RPM. A stock 1969 350 got 355 Ft/Lbs at 3000 (315 at 2400 net rating). I cruise at about this RPM (2400) with 3.73 rear but I rarely go above 60(for safety and fuel economy reasons). -BA

The crappiest gas mileage I ever got in a carb'd SBC was with 3.07 gears and 33" tires. (~10MPG freeway)
Average speed 60 mile round trip to work, 70. Intrastate on the weekend, 75, 80.
My torque at 2300 was 354. My cruising rpm is 2600
Sawlog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-24-2018, 12:24 AM   #17
Sawlog
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jun 2017
Location: Central illinois
Posts: 143
Re: Would you change rear gear?

Quote:
Originally Posted by WorkinLonghorn View Post
What speed do you cruise at? Is gas mileage a priority at all? How often really do you expect to light up that expensive rubber?

If you cruise 60-65 I would think about switching to 3.73. Any higher and I think your original plan for 3.54 would work.

I notice that your torque peak is at 3700 RPM. A stock 1969 350 got 355 Ft/Lbs at 3000 (315 at 2400 net rating). I cruise at about this RPM (2400) with 3.73 rear but I rarely go above 60(for safety and fuel economy reasons). -BA

The crappiest gas mileage I ever got in a carb'd SBC was with 3.07 gears and 33" tires. (~10MPG freeway)
I'm not buying that power rating on that ad. My old motor I took out had 12cc dished piston that were .045 in the hole with 76cc heads. The compression was 7.75. From what i have read and what my machinest has told me they were around 165 hp.that I would believe.
Sawlog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-24-2018, 02:37 AM   #18
WorkinLonghorn
Senior Member
 
WorkinLonghorn's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Studio City, Calif.
Posts: 2,861
Re: Would you change rear gear?

That's not an ad. That is from the Truck Data Book for GM. Anyway, the CR was 9-1 on those. Figures I listed are for the non-smog motor. NET HP with smog was 195 (gross with no accessories and optimum timing was still 255) but you could be right. My stock 350 from '69 was pretty tired so I can't say.
If you drive 80, then I suppose 3.07 is the ticket.
__________________
'69 GMC C2500 Custom Camper, 8 1/2' bed, New GM 350, NP 435 Close Ratio 4spd. Trans., 3.73 Dana-60 open.Camper and Trailer wiring, PS, PB, AC, tach , three gas tanks, 2nd owner, Work-Truck supreme. Best $300 I ever spent.
WorkinLonghorn is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-24-2018, 10:59 AM   #19
68Stepbed
Registered User
 
68Stepbed's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: 10-Uh-See
Posts: 5,609
Re: Would you change rear gear?

Before I express my thoughts and opinions, I'd like some more info. Just copy and paste the list below and add specs.

Engine size: bore, stroke and cubic inches
Head specs: casting number, cc volume, intake runner volume
Cam specs: Lift, duration, LSA, and/or cam part number
Transmission: Also add anything "done" to it like shift kit, etc.
Rear tire size: The overall diameter of the tire plays a crucial role in final gearing.

Normally, I'd ask for gear ratio in these scenarios, but that's been discussed already.

Keep in mind a 2000 stall converter isn't a very deep stall. Stock converters usually yield about 1200-1500 stall, and "Vette" converters are usually about 1800-2000 stall.
__________________
Matt

68 C10 stepside, LS1/700R4, TCI Engineering suspension system
68Stepbed is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-24-2018, 11:16 AM   #20
RetiredSquid
Registered User
 
Join Date: Aug 2017
Location: Lexington Park, Maryland
Posts: 17
Re: Would you change rear gear?

Howdy folks,

Been lurking for a while as I tinker on my current project (a.k.a. money pit) 69 C10 SWB. I'm at the point in my project where I'm looking to pick rear end gears and thought I would jump in for some advice on what gears.

Truck info:
Motor: LS7
Trans: 4L85E (2.48, 1.48, 1.0, 0.75 ratios)
Probably rear tire size: 295/45R20

This will not be a road trip truck, going for acceleration and handling but I still want to be around 2000 RPM at 65 MPH or so. I'm thinking in the 3.5 to 3.7 range for the rear end.

Any recommendations?

Thanks,
Matt
RetiredSquid is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-24-2018, 11:40 AM   #21
jocko
Senior Member
 
jocko's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Godley, TX
Posts: 17,940
Re: Would you change rear gear?

3.73 is the ideal gearing for most overdrive transmissions in light duty trucks unless you're gonna be hauling, towing, or have monster tires on it. Your stated goals leave you with a choice between the two for gearing. 3.73 for 2K at 65 or 4.10 if you're really after acceleration. 4L80/85 is just like a TH400 in 1st gear, so not exactly as much a torque multiplier as a 700R4 in 1st - but extremely strong (like the TH400) so an awesome trans to have. With an LS7, doesn't sound like HP or torque will be an issue, so either 3.73 or 4.10 is gonna be fine. For your combo, I think 3.73 would be preferred - more than sufficient acceleration and the highway cruising rpm you're seeking. If it were the original 350, I might lean more toward the 4.10 at the expense of a little extra highway rpm - but sounds like you won't have any trouble accelerating. With the LS7, you could probably even step down to a 3.54 or whatever is offered in that range for your rear and still be happy with your acceleration - but it would be slightly less acceleration and cruising at 65 would be below 2k rpm - so I do think 3.73 is the sweet spot for ya.
Attached Images
 

Last edited by jocko; 12-24-2018 at 11:47 AM.
jocko is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-24-2018, 12:55 PM   #22
Sawlog
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jun 2017
Location: Central illinois
Posts: 143
Re: Would you change rear gear?

Quote:
Originally Posted by 68Stepbed View Post
Before I express my thoughts and opinions, I'd like some more info. Just copy and paste the list below and add specs.

Engine size: bore, stroke and cubic inches
Head specs: casting number, cc volume, intake runner volume
Cam specs: Lift, duration, LSA, and/or cam part number
Transmission: Also add anything "done" to it like shift kit, etc.
Rear tire size: The overall diameter of the tire plays a crucial role in final gearing.

Normally, I'd ask for gear ratio in these scenarios, but that's been discussed already.

Keep in mind a 2000 stall converter isn't a very deep stall. Stock converters usually yield about 1200-1500 stall, and "Vette" converters are usually about 1800-2000 stall.
350, bored .040. 5.7in stroke
Dart iron eagle heads 165cc runners. 67 c.f. chambers
.221-221@.50 duration. .470 .470 lift lsa 108
Th400 tranny, 2000 stall.
31 10.50 rear tire.
Sawlog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-24-2018, 01:31 PM   #23
WorkinLonghorn
Senior Member
 
WorkinLonghorn's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Studio City, Calif.
Posts: 2,861
Re: Would you change rear gear?

Quote:
Originally Posted by jocko View Post
3.73 is the ideal gearing for most overdrive transmissions in light duty trucks unless you're gonna be hauling, towing, or have monster tires on it. Your stated goals leave you with a choice between the two for gearing. 3.73 for 2K at 65 or 4.10 if you're really after acceleration. 4L80/85 is just like a TH400 in 1st gear, so not exactly as much a torque multiplier as a 700R4 in 1st - but extremely strong (like the TH400) so an awesome trans to have. With an LS7, doesn't sound like HP or torque will be an issue, so either 3.73 or 4.10 is gonna be fine. For your combo, I think 3.73 would be preferred - more than sufficient acceleration and the highway cruising rpm you're seeking. If it were the original 350, I might lean more toward the 4.10 at the expense of a little extra highway rpm - but sounds like you won't have any trouble accelerating. With the LS7, you could probably even step down to a 3.54 or whatever is offered in that range for your rear and still be happy with your acceleration - but it would be slightly less acceleration and cruising at 65 would be below 2k rpm - so I do think 3.73 is the sweet spot for ya.

He has a TH 400 with a 2000 stall TC. He never said anything about an OD Transmission.
__________________
'69 GMC C2500 Custom Camper, 8 1/2' bed, New GM 350, NP 435 Close Ratio 4spd. Trans., 3.73 Dana-60 open.Camper and Trailer wiring, PS, PB, AC, tach , three gas tanks, 2nd owner, Work-Truck supreme. Best $300 I ever spent.
WorkinLonghorn is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-24-2018, 01:46 PM   #24
68Stepbed
Registered User
 
68Stepbed's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: 10-Uh-See
Posts: 5,609
Re: Would you change rear gear?

Quote:
Originally Posted by RetiredSquid View Post
Howdy folks,

Been lurking for a while as I tinker on my current project (a.k.a. money pit) 69 C10 SWB. I'm at the point in my project where I'm looking to pick rear end gears and thought I would jump in for some advice on what gears.

Truck info:
Motor: LS7
Trans: 4L85E (2.48, 1.48, 1.0, 0.75 ratios)
Probably rear tire size: 295/45R20

This will not be a road trip truck, going for acceleration and handling but I still want to be around 2000 RPM at 65 MPH or so. I'm thinking in the 3.5 to 3.7 range for the rear end.

Any recommendations?

Thanks,
Matt
3.73 or 4.11
__________________
Matt

68 C10 stepside, LS1/700R4, TCI Engineering suspension system
68Stepbed is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 12-24-2018, 01:46 PM   #25
jocko
Senior Member
 
jocko's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Godley, TX
Posts: 17,940
Re: Would you change rear gear?

Quote:
Originally Posted by WorkinLonghorn View Post
He has a TH 400 with a 2000 stall TC. He never said anything about an OD Transmission.
was answering post 20
jocko is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:43 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright 1997-2022 67-72chevytrucks.com