I'm looking into the viability of the Nissan 350Z 6 speed manual as a swap. The conversion would use an adapter similar to the ones these folks produce:
http://collinsadapters.com/index.php/ad ... apter.html
The adapter would allow the the slant six 4 speed bellhousing to bolt to the transmission after the integral bell is cut off. The thickness of the adapter would hopefully be adjusted so that you just bolt the trans to the bell with the adapter and all lengths are good with the input shaft.
I think you would just use a stock mechanical linkage setup and pressure plate for a 10" clutch disk. The stock Nissan disk is ~9.875". My thinking is that with a stock bellhousing, flywheel, pressure plate, throwout bearing and linkage, you would be able to just bolt everything together with the correct adapter plate thickness.
Potential interference issues:
-Input shaft bushing diameter (adapter for bushing required for crankshaft)
-Input spline axial position with shaft engaged with crankshaft (custom clutch disk with longer splines may be required)
-Finding a 10" pressure plate that fits on the slant six flywheel. (I haven't been able to find bolt circle dimensions or a stock vehicle application for the Ford pressure plate that is mentioned on this forum.)
-The Nissan pressure plate for the 250mm clutch is too big to fit on the flywheel. It has an 11" bolt circle. I'm looking into a 240mm (9.5") clutch kit from another Nissan. Almost all Nissans have the same 1" 24T spline on the input shaft.
-The Nissan flywheels require a small step for proper pressure plate engagement.
Is it worth monkeying around with finding a diaphragm pressure plate or are the available Borg and Beck style pressure plates for the slant adequate with the Nissan disk? I've heard the B&B style are prone to exploding. Are newer B&B style pressure plates built differently?