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4 speed vs. Auto

Started by h76, April 11, 2007, 05:19:02 PM

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h76

On a comparative condition 2nd generation charger,what $ value would you give a 4 speed charger over an automatic charger?
And would you overspend/overextend your budget to buy an available 4 speed(68,69,70) vs. Auto?

Harlow

If its not a rare or high dollar type charger, you could buy the auto and convert it to a 4 speed if you wanted, depending on the price difference between the two it might be cheaper to do the conversion. Again I would only do this if the car was lacking documentation or just not a very high dollar car. My  :Twocents:

- Scott

72chargerSE

It's no fun to stick it in drive and go....

...slap sticks always cracked me up....

I've walked away from Corvettes I've considered purchasing because they were automatics (bash me now)... I just have more fun with a standard transmission!

h76

Rust seems like the prevailing issue over anything in the other topics that have discussed values or WIW.
What I'm asking is if they are in the same condition-how  much more would you $ for 4 speed?

supserdave

I think atleast 10%........

LL1 1967 Coronet

I think you should expect to start with a 20% premium on a Charger....before the other things get factored in like the color, options, and most importantly the condition.  From a standpoint of being rare, you could even get higher than 20% because of sub-models, like '69 500's, Daytonas, and SE trim....and the unique body styles on later Chargers (like when SE's became their own body style).  Obviously, 4-speeds where not ordered by most people on the more expensive cars.

WheresMyCharger

I am in the market for a 69 Charger and a 4-speed is the only option it MUST have. If I had 2 identical Chargers to choose from, and the only difference was 4-speed or Auto, I would pay more for the 4-speed.
Have you seen my old '69 Charger??
       *XP29H9B324356*

Troy

My guess will be 10-30% higher. I'd have to say it depends partially on the condition. A project car may have a much higher premium attached to it than a finished car (say $1,500 on a $5,000 car vs. $6,000 on a $30,000 car). There will be a higher difference on a rarer car so R/Ts will have a larger spread than 383 cars. I don't believe we are discussing Hemi cars here so that debate can rage on elsewhere. The funny thing is that the higher performance cars seemed to have a larger percentage built with the 4-speed but the premium you pay is disproportionate (man that's a weird word). For instance, almost 50% of Hemi cars were stick shift but only something like .004% of 383 2bbl cars.

Would I overextend my budget? Probably, but I'm not the best person to ask for advice there. I've never had to make that decision as my bigger problem has been finding an original 4-speed car in the first place.

Troy
Sarcasm detector, that's a real good invention.

bull

I wouldn't overextend my budget to buy a 4-speed Charger because I don't really prefer one trans over the other, but many people do. Basically a 4-speed car is worth more to the right person but not to someone whom it isn't a priority. I didn't really care which trans I got but when I did find my Charger it had a 4-speed and I was happy for it (more happy just to have one than anything). My main thing was that it have a floor console and I got that.

Now that I think about it I probably did pay more for mine because the seller was going by the Old Car Book or Gold Book (or something like that) which he considered to be an accurate resource for classic car values, and I'm sure most valuation resources would take that into consideration. I was just happy to find a half-decent BB '68 within 15 miles of my house so I bought it.

HITMAN 149

Quote from: bull on April 11, 2007, 08:27:47 PM
I wouldn't overextend my budget to buy a 4-speed Charger because I don't really prefer one trans over the other, but many people do. Basically a 4-speed car is worth more to the right person but not to someone whom it isn't a priority. I didn't really care which trans I got but when I did find my Charger it had a 4-speed and I was happy for it (more happy just to have one than anything). My main thing was that it have a floor console and I got that.

Now that I think about it I probably did pay more for mine because the seller was going by the Old Car Book or Gold Book (or something like that) which he considered to be an accurate resource for classic car values, and I'm sure most valuation resources would take that into consideration. I was just happy to find a half-decent BB '68 within 15 miles of my house so I bought it.

i agree w/ BULL.... i think most people would opt for a 4 spd...(like myself) but i think most people would also agree, the shape/condition of the car would outway the trans. just like BULL, i found a SOLID car (true r/t vin#) but not original motor..it was auto on floor w/ console!!!! and the price was RIGHT..esp for a true R/T.... compared to alot of other rust buckets i went to see.  so in my case the trans didn't matter...cause if i want i could just convert it later on!!!
:devil:
68 Charger R/T, SOLD =/ sniffle sniffle
01 BMW 740i SPORT  
01 Hot Rod Harley Dresser, SOLD =/ =/

PocketThunder

My old 55 Chevy was a 4 speed and it was a crap load of work to covert it over but it was so worth it every time I rowed through the gears.  My 68 I just finished is an automatic and its fun to drive but it sucks.  But my choices at the time were to rebuild my 727 for $500 or buy everything for a 4-speed conversion which is what about $5000 by the time I'm done.   http://www.keislerauto.com/mopar/transmissions/b-body_66-70-auto.asp

My C500 is an automatic and its going to get a manual conversion when the time comes.  I don't care how rare the car is. 
"Liberalism is a disease that attacks one's ability to understand logic. Extreme manifestations include the willingness to continue down a path of self destruction, based solely on a delusional belief in a failed ideology."

LL1 1967 Coronet

Quote from: PocketThunder on April 12, 2007, 09:28:34 AM
My C500 is an automatic and its going to get a manual conversion when the time comes.  I don't care how rare the car is. 

Hey its your car, and I don't disagree - - but wow - that conversion takes ball bearings of steel. 

Old Moparz

Quote from: h76 on April 11, 2007, 05:19:02 PM
On a comparative condition 2nd generation charger,what $ value would you give a 4 speed charger over an automatic charger?
And would you overspend/overextend your budget to buy an available 4 speed(68,69,70) vs. Auto?



I think the 10% to 20% sounds about right, & if it helps any, the cost to find the 4 speed parts isn't cheap compared to an automatic. When I bought my '70 Road Runner, it came with a 23 spline 4 speed trans & a 10-1/2" flywheel, but was missing the bell housing. I had the trans rebuilt since it was basically a core & the condition was unknown, as well as getting the flywheel resurfaced. I hunted around for the bell housing & started to see prices on all the 4 speed parts, including 4 speed cores, at higher levels. (An 18 spline trans will make you dig even deeper.) Originality wasn't an issue, so I have a brand new scattershield for less cost than a stock bell housing that's 40 years old with stripped holes.

I was after a 4 speed car too so I expected to pay slightly more, but not go broke getting one.
               Bob               



              Going Nowhere In A Hurry

tricky lugnuts

Don't mean to steer the conversation to the 3rd Gens, BUT...
I think production #'s can also make a difference.
I've got a '71 SE Charger, original 440 magnum/automatic. Gunmetal Blue with matching two-tone interior. (Rust FREE Arizona car.) They only made something like 616 '71 Charger SEs with a 440 magnum. Only 29 of those, or so, were 4-speed cars -- so they are a very rare car. Maybe worth more than your typical 440 automatic '71 Charger RT, because of that rarity.
There's one on E Bay right now, buried in a pile of crap, trashed, and missing a lot of parts. Guy can't seem to get more than $750 for it.
I've thought long and hard about converting mine to a 4-speed. (I too like shifting the gears and the thought of a pistol grip  just keeps growing on me.) But since it's an original automatic, I don't think I ever will.
Anyways, back to 68-70s. Just my thoughts, however useless.  :scratchchin:

Silver68RT

I'm working on putting a 4-speed back in my '68 Charger R/T, and it's turning out to be pretty expensive.  It was converted to an automatic because someone was going to go drag racing, but I really prefer the 4-speed, so I think it's worth it to switch it all back.  I paid $750 for an 18-spline trans, $900 for the rebuild, $300 for a bellhousing, $1100 for a shifter, linkage, Z-bar, etc.  I still have to buy a clutch and flywheel, and a 4-speed console, and some other bits, which could easily add up to another $1500.  I still have to undo the floorpan/tunnel butchery that was done to put the auto in.  I could probably have had the car back on the road by now, if I was willing to settle for the automatic that's in it.  My '72 Charger SE and my '70 Road Runner were both auto's, and they were fun, but I've always wanted a big block 4-speed.

I'd say if you really want a 4-speed, and you find one with all the pieces that's within $5K of an equivalent automatic car, you're better off paying extra for the 4-speed car.

Doug
Silver68RT

RT DAVE

It depends on what options the car has, I guess.  I would personally (if I had the money) pay twice as much for a 70 or 71 hemi if it had a four speed.   For a lesser car, I would say maybe 30-40% more for a 383 or 440 car. 
68 CHARGER RT<br />06 MAGNUM RT<br />02 INTREPID SXT

Blakcharger440

I would say that the 4speed option seems to add about 15 to 25% in value in a musclecar.
Nothing screams performance like slamming gears and getting scratch down the block. The market does reflect the higher value.

road/track

You could not compare 4-spd and automatic like you compare Hemi Orange or Go Green, it's a totally different ballgame with the 4-spd you feel like you're actually driving with the stick, do what ever it takes to go with the stick!

:drive: :drive: :drive:

E86/D21/D56
-1971 Charger SE U-code 4spd track pack, one of 29...
-1971 Charger R/T 440 6 pack auto
-1961 Chrysler 300G CV, one of 337
-2014 BMW 435i M-sport

69_500

I'd go with the 4 speed every day of the week and twice on Sunday. Nothing beats shifting the gears in a Mopar.

Then again my 500 is an AT. And it doesn't really come down to who ordered their car with a 4 speed, more like who ordered it with an AT. As the AT was an option. ;) Just had to say it.

Brock Samson

i get the four speed is a better high performance vehicle argument,..
but i live and work and drive in a very congested and hilly San Francisco where every one is turning left from the right lane with their right turn signal on and for me an Auto was the ticket...







  I must say some guys have ragged on my car cause it has the 727, but different strokes... It's my freakin car.
now, If I lived in Arizona... I'd probably be banging gears with a pistol grip.  :yesnod:

PocketThunder

Quote from: Brock Samson on April 14, 2007, 09:33:39 AM
i get the four speed is a better high performance vehicle argument,..
but i live and work and drive in a very congested and hilly San Francisco where every one is turning left from the right lane with their right turn signal on and for me an Auto was the ticket...

  I must say some guys have ragged on my car cause it has the 727, but different strokes... It's my freakin car.
now, If I lived in Arizona... I'd probably be banging gears with a pistol grip.  :yesnod:

its probably nice to lock the tranny in park also when parking on hills vs relying on the stick in gear and the e-brake. :shruggy:
"Liberalism is a disease that attacks one's ability to understand logic. Extreme manifestations include the willingness to continue down a path of self destruction, based solely on a delusional belief in a failed ideology."

hemi-hampton

With a 3,800 Stall Converter & Cheetah Manual Reverse Valve Body my Automatic works fine & fun to drive. Thought I seen Alcatraz in that Arial Veiw. LEON.

Mike DC

 
Do you really want a factory 4spd Charger?
Or you really just want a stick-shifted  Charger, and you're looking for a factory 4spd car to get it?

You can convert automatic cars with money, and the Keisler or Passon OD setups both seem to be major improvements over an old factory A-833 tranny.  (Not just in tenths of a second, but also in normal driveability.)  Same for the newer hydraulic clutch setups versus the old cable linkages.  What I'm saying is that a lot of the parts in a factory 4spd have better aftermarket replacements nowadays.  It's something to consider.

Factory, aftermarket, or factory-converted . . .  a stick car usually ends up costing you $3-5K more than the same automatic car would.

 

AKcharger

I'd pay an extra $3000 for a 4 speed car all things equal. I'm converting my '70 to a 4 speed in the future, so far I've got $1100 in the below parts. Still need clutch/pressure plate and throw out bearing and floor and console boots






694spdRT

I would agree with about a 25% difference on average. It does vary like Troy mentioned based on the car's condition. From what I have seen 4 speed Charger's also seem to bring a larger premium over automatic version compared to other models like the Super Bee or Roadrunner. If you look on Ebay there are always 4 speeds of other models available but a Charger is hard to find because they just didn't build many that way. The Charger was built as a more upscale car compared to the bare bones "muscle" and many got ordered with the automatic.
1968 Charger 383 auto
1969 Charger R/T 440 4 speed
1970 Charger 500 440 auto
1972 Challenger 318
1976 W200 Club Cab 4x4 400 auto 
1978 Ramcharger 360 auto
2001 Durango SLT 4.7L (daily driver)
2005 Ram 2500 4x4 Big Horn Cummins Diesel 6 speed
2005 Jeep Grand Cherokee Limited 5.7 Hemi