If you own an Iron Duke AMC Eagle you're in great position to begin restoration of the vehicle. If you are going to rebuild an Eagle from top to bottom, it’s an Iron Duke you will want to start out with. Most of us are not willing to repair or rebuild the original engine when there are so many 4.0 and 4.2 engines available, so when it comes time to restore your car or swap engines you will likely be upgrading to a 6 cylinder.
This thread is intended to discuss the differences between a stock 1982 Iron Duke four speed and a stock 1983 258 five speed. I happen to be restoring one of each. If anyone else has information about this conversion please post it here.
The standard four speed Iron Duke was the only stock Eagle with 3.54 gears and absence of a catalytic feedback system. Those are the biggest reasons that Iron Duke Eagles are so desirable. I’ll discuss gear ratios in a separate posting, but for now I’ll conclude by saying that your 3.54 gears are a perfect match to the T5 transmission and yet no factory AMC Eagle ever had 3.54 gears, a 258, and a T5 married together. That’s the ideal combination you’re able to achieve.
First off the SR4 is junk. It should be discarded immediately because the shift lever is prone to breaking where the fork is notched. The last picture compares the shift levers of a T5 and an SR4. If you get a T5 from a CJ you should expect to spend about 150 dollars. It’s an easy transmission to rebuild for the cost of a kit ($110) and a rebuild book ($30 or downloaded from this site). A professionally rebuilt unit is readily available for about $600.
The SR4 and T5 are direct bolt on interchangeable units. The first picture shows the transmission removed with the entire clutch system and bellhousing forward of the transmission left alone. The T5 will slide right into the same space and even have the shifter come out in the same hole. The only difference between the two is shown in the second picture. It’s a plate that a metal rod bridging the front axle and transmission bolts to. On the SR4 and on the opposite side of both the T5 and the SR4 this plate attaches to the transmission with two bolts. On the passenger side of the T5 only the bulge of the 5th gear demands a different plate that only attaches to one bolt. In the third picture you can see the SR4 version of that same support bridging two holes above the rubber mount.
The two biggest differences between a 258 and an Iron Duke Eagle are the motor mounts and the transmission mount. The crossmember is actually identical except for the mounts welded to it, so you just need to get a 258 crossmember along with the engine. Those are very easy to come by. At the transmission mount, it’s actually the exact same transmission crossmember and even the exact same rubber mount, but its installed differently. In the third picture you will see the rubber mount bolted to the bottom of the Iron Duke SR4. It’s not symmetrical. To install behind a 258, you rotate the mount and bolt it on with the oval hole on the other side of the round hole. This makes the mounting holes an inch further to one side or the other. Drilled into the stock crossmember you will also find six holes. The rubber mount uses the forward four holes behind an Iron Duke and it uses the rearmost four holes behind a 258. I think its genius that they used the same rubber mount and even two mutual holes in the crossmember. It reminds me why I love AMC so much. They put alot of effort into making things interchangeable.
In conclusion the transmission sits exactly an inch rearward and an inch over in a 258 Eagle than in an Iron Duke Eagle. This means you must modify the hole in the floor to do an engine conversion. The modification of the floor is not necessary when upgrading from the SR4 to a T5, only when switching engines. The next two photos shows the floor with the SR4 hole and then the same floor with a new hole cut further back and over and a patch placed over the old SR4 hole.