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[alfa] Re: gear lightening / 2nd synchro
This wasn't a rant, and I think that you are right. These transmissions
were NOT made for Stop Light Grands Prix, and its not just an Alfa
transmission "problem," It's a characteristic of many older European
car transmissions and virtually ALL Italian ones. Ferraris up till the
early 'nineties had the so-called "weak second gear synchronizer" as
did Maseratis, Fiats, and Lancias along with Alfa Romeos. Contemporary
road tests of the De Tomaso Pantera all mentioned weak second gear
synchros in the Getrag box that DeTomaso fitted to these cars (as does
a recent "buyers' guide" section on Pantera in the British "Classic and
Sports Car" Magazine). Porsches had the same characteristic well into
the 911 era, but they fixed it earlier than the Italians. In fact,
almost any car which sports "Porsche-style transmission synchronizers"
will exhibit this characteristic. They are good, but the most strain on
synchros is on the first-second shift. American cars had strong second
gear syncros because early American designed four speeds were aimed at
drag racers. So it's not that the European synchros are weak -they are
perfectly adequate when driven properly. It's just that US
transmissions had super robust shynchros due to the type of driving
that American "performance cars" are subjected to. Nowadays, most
European and Japanese car builders, realizing that American driving
needs are quite different from those of the average European driver,
build their transmissions more along the lines of American designed
Borg-Warners and Muncie boxes with regard to synchronizers.
My GTV-6 has, apparently, NEVER been abused in the manner which lunches
synchros -at least since it was replaced for some unknown reason in
1994, With close to a hundred thousands miles on it, all the synchros
are perfect. This was revealed recently when my tranny was disassembeld
to change a suspected loose bushing (it wasn't loose). I always
double-clutch to down shift and pause between gears to upshift
(especially when the tranny is cold - being in the rear of the car, an
Alfetta transmission cannot rely on conducted engine heat to warm the
transmission, it must generate it's own heat through friction), so my
synchros should last a long time.
George Graves
'86 GTV-6 3.0 'S'
On Saturday, August 30, 2003, at 09:36 AM, alfa-digest wrote:
Date: Fri, 29 Aug 2003 12:17:13 -0700
From: "Peter Kemos" <pskemos@domain.elided>
Subject: gear lightening / 2nd synchro
The frequently heard complaint of weak second gear synchros is a MYTH.
The fact of the matter is that the transmissions were not built for US
style
"stop-light-grand-prix-racing", where one launches off in first gear
and
then slams the transmission into second, using force, not finesse.
The reason that the vast majority of US Alfa transmissions have faulty
2nd
gear synchros is because they were abused by hack drivers, whether the
previous or current owner or both.
I bought my current 73 GTV about 10 years ago. The PO had had the car
about
6 years at that point and had done zero transmission work, so the
tranny is
now at least 16 years old, and may well be an original unrebuilt unit
alltogether.
This car has since undergone a gradual transformation from beater to
decent
street ride to competitive club racer. The one thing i have to date
never
worked on is the transmission. It shifts perfectly well into second,
whether up or down, and i neither heel and toe, nor baby it.
Sorry about the rant but the "why did Alfa make such a weak 2nd
synchro......" sets me off a little.
There is nothing wrong with wanting to get the gears lightened, as it
does
allow for quicker shifts, but at the same time there is nothing wrong
or
weak about the stock design either.
There, i feel better now.
Peter Kemos
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