Merry Christmas and welcome to Packard Motor Car Information! If you're new here, please register for a free account.  
Login
Username:

Password:

Remember me



Lost Password?

Register now!
FAQ's
Main Menu
Recent Forum Topics
Who is Online
211 user(s) are online (204 user(s) are browsing Forums)

Members: 2
Guests: 209

William Grosz, wvsanta, more...
Helping out...
PackardInfo is a free resource for Packard Owners that is completely supported by user donations. If you can help out, that would be great!

Donate via PayPal
Video Content
Visit PackardInfo.com YouTube Playlist

Donate via PayPal




GM Hydramatic in a 1947 Super Clipper?
#1
Home away from home
Home away from home

Dan Phenicie
See User information
Wondering if anyone has successfully installed a 1952-56 era GM Hydramatic in a 1947 Super Clipper?

Posted on: 2013/6/25 16:09
Dan
 Top  Print   
 


Re: GM Hydramatic in a 1947 Super Clipper?
#2
Home away from home
Home away from home

JWL
See User information
Why are you asking? The senior 21st series Clippers did very well with the manual shift transmission, and even better if equipped with over drive, but questionable if they had the Electromatic clutch option.

(o{}o)

Posted on: 2013/6/25 22:11
We move toward
And make happen
What occupies our mind... (W. Scherer)
 Top  Print   
 


Re: GM Hydramatic in a 1947 Super Clipper?
#3
Home away from home
Home away from home

su8overdrive
See User information
Johnny Depp --

No offense, but perhaps such a Packard isn't really for you. JW's right. I know, coincidentally, three (3) fellows who today own '47 senior Packards, one of them a limo, who all owned, at one time or another, a 1956-58 Bentley S-Type Continental with HydraMatic and each of them compare the older Detroit production car favorably with the newer, much pricier, limited-production Crewe product.

Why would you pervert a lovely auld luxe road car, bastardize it with a convenience feature that does nothing for performance? Why not buy a '47 Cadillac, if that's what you want? They're not bad cars, and have nearly the torque if not the horsepower of a Super Clipper.

Back in the '60s when the top fuel blown 1,000-hp 426 hemis literally blew apart Cad-LaSalle gearboxes, Don Garlits switched to Packard R-9 transmissions as in '47 senior Packards in his rail dragsters and the problem ended.

JW's right as rain. Get one with overdrive and skip the ElectroMatic. Or buy a Cadillac-ack-ack-ack-ack-ack-ack.

Of course, i'm a sports car guy who decades ago, long, long ago fell under the spell of 1940-47 overdrive Packards,
the best road cars of the era from either side of the Atlantic, so the Herculean effort of shifting a silky column lever doesn't deter me.

Posted on: 2013/6/26 14:27
 Top  Print   
 


Re: GM Hydramatic in a 1947 Super Clipper?
#4
Home away from home
Home away from home

Tim Cole
See User information
I love the hydramatic. One of the greatest transmissions ever. It lasted 25 years in cars alone, powered light tanks, and in buses outperformed all the computer controlled crap that blows apart today. If it was possible then it would have happened to thousands of Packards already.

Posted on: 2013/6/26 18:21
 Top  Print   
 


Re: GM Hydramatic in a 1947 Super Clipper?
#5
Home away from home
Home away from home

su8overdrive
See User information
Whoa, steady. Was merely seconding JW's observation that the cars are fine as built, and my first line opened "No offense ." Most of us use off-the-cuff nom de plumes here, so "Johnny Depp" was a lighthearted if lame joke.

Reread my comments. They're a cordial sharing of information. And i'm serious. If you want an old luxe car with nearly the same torque and the same IFS that already has HydraMatic, why not consider a 1941-48 Cadillac?

Many of us are purists, essentially, mild tweaks, upgrades notwithstanding. But when you start swapping engines/transmissions, you lose the car's soul, hence the word "to pervert" which is leagues from calling someone, um, uh, a pervert.

Easy. Again, no offense meant. Beg pardon. Lo siento. Perhaps if you drove a well-sorted, essentially stock '47 senior you'd understand what i and the above posters are trying to say.

Dr. Cole's right. HydraMatic was and is a good automatic,
refined with wartime Federal tax dollars, produced by the same lovely corporation that sued the US government for Allied bombing damage to their German Opel plants.
Compare with East Grand's relatively classy behavior.

Tho' Consumers Reports in the day gave Packard's Ultramatic its Best Buy rating, HydraMatic would take more of a beating despite an Ultramatic lasting forever behind a straight eight if you drove like an adult, routinely changed fluid and filter. A friend racked up a whopping 137,000 miles on an Ultramatic behind his '53's 327 inline 8 with NOTHING but the preceding service and having the bands adjusted. Yes, really. Verdad. It is so.

When i was young and under the apple bough, i owned a 48,414-mile little old lady's '51 Packard with Ultramatic, and on the highway, wished it had another gear. Several friends owned/own '41 Cadillac dropheads, which i've driven. One of them has a '52 Dual-Range HydraMatic, which is not nearly as fine a driving experience as shifting yourself---and the Cad-LaSalle gearbox isn't as nice as the Packard R-9 transmission, which has nine bearings to the Cad's manual transmission's five, huskier, finer throughout. Toss in overdrive and you've really got it all.

But, as also mentioned, i'm a sports car guy who long ago got happily sidetracked by 1940-47 Packard overdrive 8s and Su8s on the shorter, standard wheelbases, so shifting yourself is part of the experience for some of us.


Automatic transmission is a convenience feature doing nothing for performance. It's a uniquely American construct, since even Rolls-Royce/Bentley didn't bother offering a slushbox (HydraMatic at that) until 1952.

Ol' su8overdrive's lotta things, but a "snob, effete" or otherwise, ain't among them, being downright catholic in my automotive taste.

Just saying.

Posted on: 2013/7/2 15:18
 Top  Print   
 


Re: GM Hydramatic in a 1947 Super Clipper?
#6
Home away from home
Home away from home

Jack Vines
See User information
Quote:
Wondering if anyone has successfully installed a 1952-56 era GM Hydramatic in a 1947 Super Clipper?
C'mon guys; must be a slow day on the forum. The OP didn't ask for an opinion as to whether or not we thought it a good idea or a mortal sin; he asked if anyone had ever done the mod. If you haven't done it, don't answer, huh?

jack vines

Posted on: 2013/7/2 20:12
 Top  Print   
 









- The following Google Ad-Sense Advert helps fund the cost of providing this free resource -
- Logged in users will not see these. Please Join and Donate to help support the website -
Search
Recent Photos
Photo of the Day
Recent Registry
Upcoming Events
Website Comments or Questions?? Click Here Copyright 2006-2024, PackardInfo.com All Rights Reserved