LOL!
So just before I went to Iraq, I snagged a 1985 Eagle Wagon. A blue one. For $500 it's not bad. I drove it to my parents' house and parked it in their back yard for a year.
The only option it has that I see is A/C.
It's a stickshift with a non-WC T5. That's ok, because those 258 cubic inches of AMC fury belt out 110 HP and 230 ftlbs. WOT upshift on the autotragic cars is 4200 RPM. And the engine sounds like it's about to come apart at the seams when you leave the pedal down that long.
My car has 2.73 gears, with a Dana 30 IFS front and the abortion known as the Dana 35 with 2 piece axles in the rear.
Plan is:
Gears: 2.73 -> something better
T-case: NP 219 -> NP 229 or similar
Engine: AMC 258 -> Jeep 4.0 HO with '7730 control using $8D set for 6 cylinders
Transmission: NWC T5 -> WC T5 or maybe even a TKO if I can score a good deal on a used one.
Stickshift cars came with 2.73 gears. The early autotragic cars also came with 2.73's. The later autotragics had two-freaking-thirty-five (2.35) gears. There was a towing package for the 6 cylinder cars that came with 3.07 gears.
However, the 4 cylinder Eagles (Iron Duke POWA!!) came with 3.54 gears... now that's starting to get somewhere.
I found a 3.54 front diff via http://www.car-parts.com in a junkyard a couple of states over. I had it shipped here.
After doing some research, I decided I wanted a Chrysler 8.25" axle for the rear. Those were available in Cherokees starting from '90 or '91 on. They had 27 spline shafts until '96. In '97 the got 29 spline shafts. The Cherokee leaf spring width, hub width and bolt pattern are the same as the Eagle's. The shock mounts appear identical and the u-joint ought to be the same. A Cherokee axle *should* just drop into an Eagle.
I located a '98 8.25 with 3.55 gears locally at a yard that was not on http://www.car-parts.com
The owner said he'd let me have the axle for $75 if I pulled it myself.
My dad and I went out there two weekends ago and pulled the axle along with three sets of disk brakes from late '90's Grand Cherokees with Dana 44's. The caliper brackets appear to just bolt on to Dana 35's and Chrysler 8.25's also.
(All of the above are C-clip axles)
However, right after I pulled the 8.25, I noticed an '87 Wagoneer in the crush row. I stuck my head under it and saw a Dana 44. I rubbed the caked mud off the tag and found it was a 3.54. I stretched the tape and the spring and hub distances were right, as was the bolt circle. The yard manager said he'd let me have that one for $75 also, because it's in the crush row. The crusher was setting up as we spoke, so even though it was 4 o'clock and I'd spent all of my Saturday in the junk yard, I had to pull it *that day* or it wouldn't be waiting for me when I came back.
So I did.
And now I have a *NON*-c-clip Dana 44 that should bolt right into my Eagle. I pulled the drum brakes off today so that I could have the older axle flange pattern machined into the caliper brackets I'd pulled from the GC's. I also took the axle across the street to the 1/4 car wash (only 1/4 or less of a car at a time) and pressure washed it. It's mostly clean but still has some tough grime. I'm going to hit it with a wire brush on an angle grinder before prepping and painting it with POR-15 and chassis coat.
Pics:
1987 Wagoneer Dana 44 axle after removal of the drum brakes, but before cleaning
Axle after pressure washing in the quarter car wash
Original drum brakes
Dana 44 disk brake caliper brackets from late '90's Grand Cherokee