Looking at a /6 powered Mirada. Want to do a 440 swap. Any standard Dana 60 that is a direct bolt in? Thanks
Instead of fabircating a Dana 60 to fit in, why not look for a bolt in 9.25"? I think Mopar put them into certain cars in the F/J/M class like police dippys with limited slip factory.
Unless you are going wild on a 440 build, you will not break it. And I mean really wild, and then taking it to the strip with drag slicks.
This forum doesn;t talk about the 9.25's much as they really were only in the late cars like the Cordoba and magnum, or the 2/4 door versions of Coronet or things like my Police Monaco. But the 9.25" for the same platform is an actual direct bolt in where a 8.25" was, and maybe(never looked but it should) where a 7.25" was.
To my knowledge, within a generation at least, the entire brake system can swap from one to the other also. Obviously within a range of years as brakes changed over decades.
Unlimited gear choice because Chrysler made the 9.25 for decades and the guts are interchangeable.
I might be wrong, but I thought Mopar carried the spacing for the spring pads over from the late B bodies to the F/J/M cars. Again, I am certainly no expert on the last RWD cars so I might be totally wrong here. If I am right, then a Cordoba rear end would bolt in. 400BB Cordobas generally speaking had the 9.25, but likely had suboptimal gearing or an open diff.
The idea of big blocks shredding rear axles in Mopars comes from the late 60's/early 70's cars where they had silly things like 8.25's in them, and the 8.75 could be busted if enough traction and power were combined at the track. On normal street tires, a 440 doing righteous burnouts won't bust an 8.75 either, it really needs traction to prevent spin, which creates the excessive driveline strain. Thats why people smoke rears at a drag strip. The dana 60 was the answer back then. A few years later Mopar made the 9.25" to put behind big blocks.
Anyway, another option to consider as it may be easier to install then a Dana and you will have functionally a similar end result with less cost, unless you are building a true drag strip car with a stroked 440. If your /6 has an 8.25" now, a 9.25" from the same era will bolt right in, and you can even swap the entire factory brakes on as the back plates should be shared. I would check into it anyway before spending money.
edit: oh another bonus is the driveshaft length going from 8.25 to 9.25 is the same, so you don;t have to deal with that either.