nubuilder
Why buy new when you can restore?
I'm a little confused about the manual transmissions found in the late 90's GM trucks.
My S10 has the RPO code M50 which is a NV3500 with the following gear ratios:
(according to Wikipedia)
1 = 3.49
2 = 2.16
3 = 1.40
4 = 1.00
5 = 0.73
R = 3.55
Also according to Wiki, the NV3500 had 2 gearings, the one above (M50) and a MG5 with 1 = 4.02 and 2 = 2.32; the others the same. It says the M50 is for small trucks and the MG5 is for full-size light-duty trucks.
I looked at a '96 K1500 today (rusty and 307k mi) that had the M50 code.
According to this calculator, 3.42 gears with 31" tires will turn the engine 50rpm slower (at 60mph) than my 3.08 with 27" tires S10. WIN!!
Can anyone explain why the same trans is used in both trucks? Are there differences with the quality of the internals?
I would think a heavier truck with a larger engine would require a different trans from my small and light S10.
Thanks!
My S10 has the RPO code M50 which is a NV3500 with the following gear ratios:
(according to Wikipedia)
1 = 3.49
2 = 2.16
3 = 1.40
4 = 1.00
5 = 0.73
R = 3.55
Also according to Wiki, the NV3500 had 2 gearings, the one above (M50) and a MG5 with 1 = 4.02 and 2 = 2.32; the others the same. It says the M50 is for small trucks and the MG5 is for full-size light-duty trucks.
I looked at a '96 K1500 today (rusty and 307k mi) that had the M50 code.
According to this calculator, 3.42 gears with 31" tires will turn the engine 50rpm slower (at 60mph) than my 3.08 with 27" tires S10. WIN!!
Can anyone explain why the same trans is used in both trucks? Are there differences with the quality of the internals?
I would think a heavier truck with a larger engine would require a different trans from my small and light S10.

Thanks!

performance