
Originally Posted by
pfillery
Thanks Diana. does the weird slave cylinder suggest at a glance that it may be a s2? the engine to gearbox adaptor looks like a large round cast piece and looks like steel rather than alloy. I have not yet started to strip bits out however if the box looks good thats one thing I'll keep, especially since someone has been good enough to put a removable gearbox crossmember in. The front diff looks a bit unusual too, has a reinforcing plate under the long side so not 100% certain but could it be military?
The simple way to tell a 1/2/2a gearbox from a 3 gearbox is the clutch withdrawal mechanism. The earlier ones (1/2/2a), being designed for a mechanical linkage, have a horizontal shaft sticking out the driver's side of the bell housing (with an external slave cylinder and bell crank on the 2/2a) and the Series 3 has the slave cylinder bolted to the front of the bell housing and operating directly on a clutch fork. (This is not 100%, as a very few late Series 2a had a similar setup to the S3 with an all synchro box, and in any case the bell housing and clutch release mechanism can be swapped, depending on suffix letter.)
Also note that the engine end of the bell housing is different between the six and the four, and if it has a Holden engine it may not be obvious which you have.
The reinforced front (and rear) axle assembly is not specifically military, but became an option during S2a production.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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