-

Anyone whos taken apart a regular geardriven two-speed transfer case recognizes this
-

A test mock-up shows how the SM420 case mates to the Rock Box and the Toyota transfer case
-

Assembled in the case, the cluster gear rides on a shaft with caged needle bearings. The R
-

We followed an install on a Cruiser at the Advance Adapters facility, and a complete
-

To retain the Rock Box input gear, the transmission output shaft is whacked to length, the
-

With the input gear bolted down, two all-thread aligning dowels are installed to help guid
-

The final product looks like it belongs underneath like a factory setup. The shifter goes
The first adapter made by Advance Adapters was to hook a Muncie car four-speed to a Jeep Dana 18 transfer case. Back in the early 60s the idea of a 1.9:1 First gear was cool; you could have a Jeep with 5.38 axle gears and still haul ass in the sand dunes. Nowadays, low axle and transfer case gears and lower tranny ratios are the rage, as are Atlas II transfer cases, doublers, and Klune-V units.
One of the big problems for Jeeps and Land Cruisers is the short wheelbase, which makes it hard to fit extra gearboxes anywhere, especially with a lift. The resulting driveline angle just wont cut it, even with double CV joints. Recently, Advance Adapters had the notion to solve this riddle with an adapter replacement that doubles as a gear reduction unit. Enter the two-speed Rock Box.
The Rock Box is basically spur and helical gearsets in a nice housing, which fits between the transmission and transfer case. In low, the ratio is 3.44:1, while direct drive is of course 1:1. Currently, Advance has applications for Toyota Land Cruiser transfer cases mated to the stock four-speed tranny or, best of all, adapted to the GM SM420 and SM465 four-speeds. The SM420 has a low 7.06 First gear, and coupled with the 3.44 of the Rock Box and the 1.96 of the Toy case, you have a super-low crawl ratio with stock 4.11 axle gears of almost 200:1. Quite nice! In addition, the Rock Box is about the same length as the old adapter (5 inches), which negates any driveshaft mods or other problems. Of course if you have the Toyota trannies, youve got to make some changes.
We recently had the chance to try out a Rock Box in the rocks, as well as follow an installation and see some other new goodies Advance has on the boards. We think that this is a much needed product, and Cruiser owners should be rejoicing. Now all we have to do is convince Advance to offer applications for the Chevy, Ford, Jeep, and other vehicles.
|
|
Advance Adapters
4320 Aerotech Center Way
P.O. Box 247
Paso Robles
CA
93446
805-238-7000
| |