bczygan
Well-known member
1986 to 2002 vehicles.
Any SAE on these and newer vehicles?
Any SAE on these and newer vehicles?
1986 to 2002 vehicles.
Any SAE on these and newer vehicles?
My 95 Dodge/Cummins is mostly SAE with just a little metric thrown in for fun.
On my 3800 1998 Pontiac Grand Prix it was always take a guess with respect to metric/SAE bolts and nuts. Mostly metric with a bunch of 5/16 thrown in (upper intake manifold) along with other SAE sizes. I don't think this stupidity ended until 2010 or so. Now it's all metric but for the longest time all of the legacy stuff (like the 3800 V6) was whatever it was. DROVE ME NUTS! At least on my 911 and on my Sonata I don't have to guess what size the fasteners are.
Rats!
I was hoping to leave SAE out of the service cart.
Vehicles are:
86 Pontiac 6000
90 Pontiac 6000
95 E350 Ford Econoline
95 Chevy Astro Van
02 Chevy Astro Van
Where would SAE show up on these?
Bill
Wrangler YJ's 1987-95 and TJ's 1997-02 are pretty close to 50/50 split between SAE and metric.
Rats!
I was hoping to leave SAE out of the service cart.
Vehicles are:
86 Pontiac 6000
90 Pontiac 6000
95 E350 Ford Econoline
95 Chevy Astro Van
02 Chevy Astro Van
Where would SAE show up on these?
Bill
Yikes! What are you, the service guy for a Michigan version of Trailer Park Boys?

Yikes! What are you, the service guy for a Michigan version of Trailer Park Boys?
This is the best thing I've ever seen on the internet![]()
American manufacturers started switching in the 1980's. Expect from there on to have mostly metric fasteners for body and suspension/chassis. Drivetrain will switch from SAE to metric as the old engines are phased out in favor of new designs that are metric.
Example: Ford used the old 302/5.0L V8 in the Explorer/Mountaineer until 2001. That engine design dates back to 1962. All SAE fasteners on the basic engine parts. The 4.0L V6, and the 4.6L V8 introduced in 2002 model year, are newer designs, all metric.
Boeing, Lockheed, and Northrop Grumman ��
The FWD version of the TH 400 was the TH 425. The 325 was a downsized FWD trans which may or may not have been based on the TH 350.I worked at Hydramatic. The THM400 transmissions, and all the later iterations of that model, were all SAE, right up to the end in 2010. Likely the THM 325 was SAE also, being just a 400 that was modified to be FWD. Every other transmission that came later, starting with the THM 200 around 1977 or so, was metric.
They started switching earlier than that. I'm thinking the '78 "A" body had a mix of SAE and metric. Fairly sure the Chevette had some metric from when it was introduced in...'76?American manufacturers started switching in the 1980's. Expect from there on to have mostly metric fasteners for body and suspension/chassis. Drivetrain will switch from SAE to metric as the old engines are phased out in favor of new designs that are metric.
My 86 Chevy pickup is all SAE.