Postby Odd » 22 Feb 2009 19:18
<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Century Gothic, Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"> I suspect that it is a gearbox from something other than a TR7 which is causing the problem
& I do know that the gearbox has been replaced. <hr height="1" noshade id="quote"></font id="quote"></blockquote id="quote"> What ratio(s) there are in the gearbox is not the least important. What <u>is</u> important is what driving gear is in there;
the white 7 tooth or the black 8 tooth. And that can easily be seen/determined when you have the driven gear
out of the gearbox, it's just a matter of peeping into the empty hole... (Use a mirror if needed!)
Next step would be to determine <u>exactly</u> what rear axle ratio there is in your axle, it could be any of the following:
2.84:1 , 3.08:1 , 3.45:1 or 3.90:1. My guess would be it's a 3.90:1...
Provided you have a 3.90:1 rear axle and original wheels (185/70*13 = 1800mm rolling circumference) the 'correct'
driven gears for the two different driving gears would be:
White 7 tooth should have a Red 22 tooth.
Black 8 tooth should have a White 25 tooth.
Then your fault would be within a few percent (-1.2 to -1.4 percent to be precise).
If you have any other combination the calculations will have to be altered accordingly...
/Odd