Does anyone have any experience with this product?
http://malinmotors.com/product...eKit/p_cableKit.html
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quote:Originally posted by Rick P.:
Does anyone have any experience with this product?
http://malinmotors.com/product...eKit/p_cableKit.html
quote:Originally posted by Rick P.:
I have not tried removing the spring/plunger assy. but I did read over the article you sent me and it looks pretty striaght forward...but it is almost 40 years old so who knows what might be encountered. If you are going to try it please keep me posted. I would like to hear how it really goes.
....and "coin" is not what one would drop for this shifter and cable conversion. An arm and a leg is more like it at $1500.00. I would have to save up my allowance for many moons to get this thing.
quote:Well the real question is this a change for change sake or is it an improvement? A significant one? The cable shift cars I've driven don't have better feel to them. They are a bit lighter though.
quote:There was not much in the way of instructions so you need to be able to figure this sort of thing out to sme degree.
quote:a Few years ago I had this shifter on approval in my shop for 6 months and could not get motivated enough to jump thru the hoops needed to install it for testing. The version I had was made of 1" thick 6061 aluminum plate and weighed about 2.5X what an entire stock shifter assembly does. Installation is not plug-and-play due to the cable length requirement. Lloyd Butfoy worked on the development for his 6-speed conversion and said that at the end, it worked 'OK' but was no improvement, so he sold the rights to another shop. Now it appears its been sold again.
IMHO, the stock Pantera shifter, once the redundant shift detent is removed from under the console (a 5.0 minute, no-cost mod) and is adjusted to the specs in the Red Owners Manual, works very well. I suggest using the money to buy some good wheels, tires and brakes. The kit GT-40 guys seem to like the cable shifters over what the car makers supply. My 2 cents- J DeRyke
quote:I suggest using the money to buy some good wheels, tires and brakes.
quote:Show me the beef.
quote:What track are you going to hold the introduction and test drive at?
quote:Originally posted by ZR1 Pantera:quote:What track are you going to hold the introduction and test drive at?
If you are real nice I'll let you come over to my house and sit in my car. You can then shift it all you want (with the motor OFF). You can also make all the rumm!!! rumm!!! noises you want too...
quote:Originally posted by PanteraDoug:
Thanks for the reply BW. It's important to seperate fact from salesmanship.
Give me a dozen testimonials here from people who would know the difference.
I would point out that a short shifter is not necessarily something that is a positive.
Son #1 has one in one of his SVT Contours. The blown one. It is a cable operated shifter.
He can drive it. I can't feel the differences between the gears.
The Taurus SHO went through this as well. The original cars were all cable shifted. The upgrade is to a rod/shaft shifter. Big difference and improvement.
Sorry, but for the cost and the labor to go into this, this is a hard sell for me.
Too many changes in this group just for the sake of being different.
Show me I'm wrong? Got a demonstrator I can drive?
quote:Originally posted by ZR1 Pantera:
All joking aside, the function will be there. I agree, if it isn't better then I wouldn't go that route either.
I just finished with some geometry design changes I wanted to make to make it even better. We got it re-installed in the car today and am VERY happy with the results.
Another functional benefit is, it is maintenance free. There is nothing to lube and nothing to cause shifter issues once things heat up (like a lot of people complain about with the rod shifter).
Once my car is running again, people will be able to try it first hand.