Still when you tighten the bolt, you will be tightening the spacer against the case unless you put sides on it and hold it in position while you turn the bolt...this will make it nearly impossible for you to determine how tight the bolt really is and it still won't get you anything, structurally.
Yeah, I was thinking about grinding some flats onto the spacer, but you make a good point...
Just use some aluminum tube...
Okay, that's pretty much what I was thinking originally. Makes sense to me.
I wouldn't bother with threading the spacer. That just has potential for causing problems without fixing or really helping anything.
Okay, I'm with you on that now.
Given your situation, I can really only think of two things to do:
1) Thread Repair - Either drill and tap to next size, and use a larger bolt, or install a thread repair kit like a Heli-Coil or TimeSert. The TimeSert is what I'd go with over a heli-coil. You will still need to grind the boss down flush and create a spacer with either option in my opinion.
Well now, the threads in the remaining portion of the trans boss are still good (not 100% perfect, but I believe that if I run a tap through them, they'll be most of the way there). So I don't see the need for any thread repair, just a spacer. Am I missing something there?
2) Replace the case half.
Yeah, I've got my finger poised over the "ORDER" button on the SHONut site for a diff shim kit... It just depends on how confident I am about the spacer idea.
The last option, the most involved option, is to cut the boss off and machine a new aluminum stub piece to be welded on. I wouldn't really not recommend this unless you just want to do it as welding cast alum is a PITA. You will need to find a TIG welder who can use free-hand fill sticks (not wire feed) and who has an oven that he can preheat the casing in. The new stub will also need to be machined at an angle at the welding end so that he can get thorough *********** between the old and new alum and then fill in the valley with filler. Then after all that there is no guarantee that you won't warp the case enough requiring you to re-shim it anyways. The good new is that the boss will end up as strong, if not stronger, then the original. You could even grab 1/8" alum sheet and make reinforcement webbing for it if you wanted to. Still a lot of damn work and unnecessary for your situation IMHO.
Yeah, that sounds like Overkill City. This is really a budget build, and I'm out in the middle of nowhere with no connections and no helpers or technical buddies.
Have you tried calling a trans shop and ask them how much to have them swap the case end and re-shim? It might be cheaper then you think, and they will be able to give it the evil eye and tell you right away if anything is majorly wrong with it.
No, I haven't tried that, and forgive me for saying so, but I don't want anyone but myself to work on any part of this car. It isn't that I'm a know-it-all (okay, maybe I am, but that's not why) or that the car is something special (it's not), it's just a matter of principle. I took on this project by myself, and I will complete it by myself or fail trying. This car is part of my hobby, not my transportation, so if I can't fix it, then that just means that I've just got more to learn before I try again. I can't learn anything by farming the work out to "professionals", so I'd rather just save my gas and hermit-like ways and do it myself.
I would imagine that the closest reputable transmission shop is probably in Denver (an hour or two away from me), and I wouldn't have the first clue which one of the many is reputable. I've had way too many run-ins with idiot transmission techs in my day to just trust anyone with an "AAMCO" shirt on.
I guess that's one thing I ought to be clear on: My first goal in this project is to learn as much as I can, in a hands-on fashion. My second goal is to get the car put together with the upgrades and working well. My third goal is to get good performance out of it. So, if I put this transmission in, and there's something wrong with it, or it breaks again because the mount is insufficient, then I'll pull it back out, assess the issue and attempt to fix it myself. Of course, I'll attempt to make good decisions the first time, but I won't have anyone else work on anything, because then I've given up the point of having this as a hobby.
Thanks again for all of your input. Please understand that I'm stubborn about working on it myself, but I do recognize that I wouldn't be anywhere without the input from others here, so I do welcome your comments.