I've had the drive line angles for about a month now and I've been taking sometime to think about options before I replied.
With the car sitting on flat ground and the transmission up as high as possible the drive line angles are as shown in image 1
With these drive line angles the first point of contact between the transmission and and car is the over transmission chassis rail as shown in image 2,3,4,5
If the transmission where contacting the floor pan, I would not be as concerned as I could cut up the floor and fix the drive line angle from there.
The problem is the engine is leaning so far back and the trans is hitting the chassis.
Below is my logic for why the trans is hitting the above trans chassis rail, when it does not on some many other e-body TKO 600 installations. Any other suggestions would be much appreciated?
At some stage in the cars life the floor pan has been replaced, this was done before any subframe connectors were installed. I'm thinking that when the floor pan was replaced, the internal structure of the car was not braced, so the car drooped downwards in the centre. The new pan was then welded in and the centre of the car remained bent downwards.
Last year I had some subframe connectors installed, so if the car is drooped down in the centre, then there would be some un-intended forces (potentially problematic??) being applied to the subframes.
Any other suggestions or reasoning would be much appreciated.
To see if the car is bent down in the centre I plan to take some measurements of the chassis, if anyone has any schematics, or dimensioned diagrams of how a chassis should be on a 1973 Dodge Challenger, that would be excellent.
Thanks in Advance