The gear ratio was whatever the customer ordered back then, you could get anything from a 2.76 ratio to a 4.10 rear gear.
A CVT transmission is a type of automatic transmission. It can provide any ratio between its minimum and maximum limits.
3.73 if you have a 350good engine and automatic transmission
automatic transmission would have a 3.23 axle ratio.manual transmission would have a 3.42 axle ratio.
That's going to depend on the final drive ratio of the transmission, the rear end ratio of the axles, and the dimensions of the tires. In the case of an automatic transmission, it'll also be dependent on the ECM settings.
It can have either the standard 3-speed manual transmission, the optional 2-speed Powerglide automatic transmission, the 4-speed manual wide-ratio transmission available with the first two power plants, and 4-speed manual close-ratio transmission available with the top two power plants.
yes, its a possible but it depends on the drive train, your gear ratio, and if its an automatic or manual.
the ratio's varied the most common was a 360 an some of them were 383
The transmission from a 4g63 will work on a4g63t whether it is standard or automatic however the standard transmission from the non-turbo engine will have a different final gear ratio than the turbo model. The automatic transmission from any model is essentially the same save the AWD model which has a secondary output shaft for the transfer case.
No, it is 4.62 for the automatic and 5.12 for the manual. this is due to the difference in the transmission's gear ratio. If you were to put a 5.12 rear with an automatic you would lose 10 MPH off your speed.
Depends on the differential gear ratio, engine size and transmission be it standard or automatic. A 4+2 S-10 with a 2.2L engine and a standard transmission should get 27-29 mpg highway. A 4+2 S-10 with a 4.3L engine and a automatic transmission would probably get 15-18 mpg highway. If the differential ratio is a 3.73 those numbers would drop.
There are several. It depends on engine size, transmission, etc. For example, a V-8 car with "highway gears" would have 2.73:1 ratio for a turbohydramatic automatic transmission and a 3.08:1 ratio for a manual transmission. However, if the car came equipped with a close ratio 4 speed or powerglide, it would most likely NOT have a gear ratio numerically lower than 3.31:1 due to drivability issues. ... Especially with the close ratio 4 speed.
Yes it will but the gear ratio will be a slight bit different.