Rear Ends And Ratios
Once you get one of our
Ford performance engines in your car,
upgrading the stock rear end to a Traction Lock with a different gear ratio will
pay off.
The key is to Choose a gear ratio which will give better performance and still
be able to drive their car on the street.
A brief explanation.
When someone says “I have a 9 inch 3:25 Traction Lock in my car”, what they are
really saying is that their car is equipped with a 9 inch rear end, that the
driveline has to make 3 and 1/4 turns to turn the rear wheels over 1 time, and
that both rear wheels drive the car. It sounds straightforward, but let’s look
at each part separately. That this information pertains to Mostly 1965 to 1973
Mustangs and other cars of those years.
Ford 8 inch or 9 inch Rear?
Ford made two size ring gears and this is what is referred to a 8” or a 9” rear end. The housing for 8” rear ends is more rectangular while the 9” is more round. All 1964 1/2 to 1966 Mustangs with the 289 engine had the 8” rear end except the high Performance “K” equipped cars which are very rare.
Traction Lock And Open Rear Ends
A Traction Lock rear end will make both rear tires push the car down the
road while an Open rear end has only one wheel pushing the car. This is why you
will see a car with an Open rear end smoking only one wheel under severe
acceleration, leaving only one black mark on the pavement. The wheel on the
right has lost it’s traction and is spinning wildly while the left wheel is
freewheeling. Also in a mud or snow condition, when one rear wheel gets stuck
and spins, the other freewheels. The Open rear end does not have the ability to
move the car.
On a Traction Lock equipped car, both tires are locked together with an
internal set of clutches. This means that if one tire looses traction, the other
will be able to move the car forward or backward. This is why a Traction Lock
equipped car will smoke both rear tires and leave two black marks instead of
just one under severe acceleration. As you can see, from a performance stand
point, a Traction Lock in any performance oriented car is essential. It not
only gives you twice the traction, it gives you a lot more control during high
speed cornering.
The Gear Ratio
The gear ratio is simply the number
of revolutions that the drive line has to make for the tires to make one
complete revolution. One revolution of the rear wheels usually moves a 1965 to
1973 Mustang a little over 6 feet.
If you have a 2:80 to 1 rear end in your car. This means that the drive line
must make 2 complete revolution plus 80% of another revolution to turn the rear
tires one complete revolution. So with that in mind, it’s easy to see that the
drive line in a car equipped with a 3:50 rear end would have to make 3 complete
revolutions plus .50 (or 1/2) of another, and that the drive line in a car
equipped with a 4:11 rear end would have to make 4 complete revolutions plus .11
of another, and so on.
If you change from a 2:80 rear end to
a 4:11 rear end, the car will go slower at the same engine speed. Since your
speedometer is operated by your transmission and will be calibrated for the 2:80
rear end, it will tell you that you are going around 90 miles per hour when you
are really only going 60! Remember that you will need to have your speedometer
adjusted whenever you change gear ratios.
Also, the 2:80 equipped car will have a much higher top speed than the 4:11
car but it will take longer to get there. How this effects most of us in our
street cars is that we want a happy medium where we have good low
end acceleration but the car is still comfortable going down the freeway at 60
to 70 mph.
What Most Mustangs Are Equipped With
Most 1965 to 1973 Mustangs are equipped from the factory with a 2:80 to a 3:00 open rear end. Being equipped with optional engines and transmissions can change the rear end ratio. Also, remember that any gear ratio can be a Open or a Traction Lock. You will find 3:50 Opens and 3:50 Traction locks in the same type of car. What matters is whether the car, when it was new, was ordered with the optional Traction Lock rear end. The exceptions were the performance oriented Mustangs such as the High Performance 289 “K” Mustangs, Shelby’s, Mach I’s, 429 CJ’s, and the Boss 302’s, Boss 351’s and Boss 429’s. Although you would think that the Traction Lock would be standard equipment on these cars, on many it wasn’t.
The Transmission Factor
Manual transmissions, in high gear, have a 1:1 ratio. This means that with the clutch engaged, the drive line turns on full revolution for each engine rpm. If your car is equipped with an automatic transmission, the revolutions per minute (rpm) of the engine will go up because the torque converter does not convert all of the engines rpm’s to usable revolutions the way the clutch on a manual transmission does. This is why, in the past 10 years or so, the auto manufactures have come up with locking torque converters and automatic over drive (A.O.D.) transmissions.
What’s Right For You
Now that we understand the meaning of a 2:80 open rear end verses
a 4:11 Traction Lock rear end, let’s take a look at how to choose what’s right
for you. Since the drive line in a 2:80 equipped car has to go around fewer
times than the drive line in a 4:11 equipped car, the engines rpm’s will be less
at 60 miles an hour. The engine’s rpm’s with the 2:80 rear end and a standard
transmission will be in the 2,300 range while the 4:11 equipped car will be
around 3,500.
So why would anyone want a 4:11 rear end? The 2:80’s are great for gas
mileage, but not for peak performance. It takes more effort from the
engine to start a car rolling from a dead stop with the 2:80 gear ratio than it
does with the 4:11. So, the 4:11’s, while not the best for freeway driving, will
make the car much faster off the line and through the gears, which is exactly
what you want from a performance car.
A Rule Of Thumb
A good rule of thumb for gear ratios is as follows. With a 23 to 25 inch tall tire and an automatic transmission, use a 2:80 to a 3:50 gear ratio. Anything over a 3:50 will make the car too low geared for freeway driving. Your rpm range will be approximately 2,700 with the 2:80 to 3,500 with he 3:50 at 60 mph. With a manual transmission and 23 to 25 inch tall tires, use a 3:50 to 4:11 ratio. Your rpm range will be approximately 2,900 with the 3:50 to 3,500 with the 4:11 at 60 mph.
Article courtesy of Mustangs Plus. For informational purposes only. Engine Factory does not specialize in Rear End Drivetrains.
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