Originally posted by AKoperdak
the one thing I did not see in ANY of these postings is the clutch.
Let me change that.
Believe it or not the 5 spd has a bigger and stronger clutch than the 6spd. I am sure some PBR drinker will say otherwise but the truth is the 5 spd clutch will drag the 6spd from Dallas to Houston.
I don't believe it, and I'm not a drunk PBR participant.
5-speed clutch = 12. 3", 312. 5mm
6-speed clutch = 13. 0", 330mm
To Quote Peter @ South Bend Clutch. The Hub of the 13" clutch is 3x as strong as the 5-speed. (which explains why the center of the 5-speed clutchs rip out)
The 6spd has more gears for pulling and smoother in-town/hill pull driving but I will put money my 5spd will handle more torque than a 6spd. Doubters bring it on.
Here it comes. Money on the 5-speed?
Check the torque loading specs you will see that I am right.
Torque/shaft size Specs:
6-speed
Input Shaft: 1-3/8" 10 spline (after Aug 99)
Input torque rating 550 ft-lb
GCVWR: 26, 000 lb
**(A HD version for larger trucks is rated for 650 LB-ft input. )**
5-speed
Input shaft: 1-1/4" 10 spline
Input torque rating: 460 ft-lb
Max GCVWR: 21,000 lb
I don't like my 5 spd between 25-40 MPH because I either have to shift up and lug my engine or shift down and Rev her up.
~~~Gear~~~~5-spd~~6-spd
First Gear------- 5. 61 ---- 5. 63
Second Gear -- 3. 04 ---- 3. 38
Third Gear ----- 1. 67 ---- 2. 04
Fourth Gear --- 1. 00 ---- 1. 39
Fifth Gear ------ 0. 74 ---- 1. 00
Sixth Gear ----- N/A -----0. 73
Reverse- pre '98 5-speeds - 5. 61 ratio, post '98's - 5. 04
6-speed - 5. 63
Time for a 6-speed?
Merrick Cummings Jr