mopar 361, 383, 413, 426, 440, or the 426 hemi.
Borg Warner
---No, the International and AMC have two completely different bolt patterns. AMC's 304 was built by AMC and the IH 304 was built by IH. Furthermore, the IH 727 was built to IH's specs, so more than the extra steels and clutches, tighter tolerances and bolt pattern will make it different. The throttle operates a linkage that mounts to the transmission and operates a throttle lever on the transmission, which in turn operates the valve body. In other words, the Chrysler 727 is vacuum modulated and the IH 727 is mechanical. You'll never get it to run right without the linkage and I hope you took time to unbolt rather than cut parts out with a torch. ---As for torque converters, I have no idea what would/wouldn't work with AMC. AFAIK, the only Chrysler torque converter that works on an IH 727, when bolting to an IH 304, is the 10". It all depends on which engine the 72 Scout had. If the 72 Scout had a 258 6-cylinder engine, which was made by AMC, then the transmission will have the same bolt pattern as the AMC 304. It was a stock engine available in the Scouts.
The easiest and cheapest way would be to find a donor Scout and scavenge parts off that vehicle.
The power of the engine and the maximum speed of the 1971 International Scout are 197hp and 227 mph respectively.
The original Boy Scout handbook has changed a lot! For one thing, it had very few merit badges, one of which was master of arms (martial arts).
Swedish Girl Guides
300-500 USD
The Cub Scout motto, "Do your best," is as old as the Cub Scouts. It is contained in the original literature written by Baden-Powel himself. "Cubbing" was introduced in the US in 1930.
"Scout" may be either a noun or a verb. As a verb it means to inquire into a situation at a distance and report back to the original location, and as a noun it means a person who performs such actions.
Chiltons manual
From front to rear, drivers side1,3,5,7 passenger side 2,4,6,8
According to "The Girl Scout Law Through the Years" on the scoutingweb.com web site (see Related Links), since the original Girl Scout Law in 1912, changes have been made to the Law a total of five times.