TH400 trans mount bolts

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

496bb

Full Access Member
Joined
Oct 9, 2023
Posts
106
Reaction score
106
Location
AL
First Name
CL
Truck Year
1987
Truck Model
Suburban R20
Engine Size
454
Noticed I am missing one of the two bolts that go through the trans mount on the rear of my 87 R20 Burb's th400. Can anybody help me out with the bolt size/length needed so I can go grab one?
 

Ricko1966

Full Access Member
Joined
Apr 11, 2017
Posts
9,945
Reaction score
19,074
Location
kansas
First Name
Rick
Truck Year
1975
Truck Model
c20
Engine Size
350
I'm pretty sure there were 2 different possibilities,best bet is pull the one you have and match it. If I just wanted to buy something and go home with too much. I'd buy a 7/16th coarse 7/16th fine and an m10x1.5 all 1.25 long.
 
Last edited:

DoubleDingo

Full Access Member
Joined
Jul 3, 2012
Posts
13,903
Reaction score
23,751
Location
Right where I am
First Name
Bagoomba
Truck Year
1981
Truck Model
81-C20 Silverado Camper Special-TH400-4.10s
Engine Size
Carb'ed Vortec 350
I'm pretty sure there were 2 different possibilities,best bet is pull the one you have and match it. If I just wanted to buy something and go home with too much. I'd buy a 7/16th coarse 7/16th fine and an m10x1.5 all 1.25 long.
^^^^^THIS^^^^^
 

Rickf

Full Access Member
Joined
Jul 29, 2017
Posts
655
Reaction score
864
Location
Grafton NH
First Name
Rick
Truck Year
1974, 1954 & a 1937
Truck Model
K20
Engine Size
350
1) I'd get some tools,
2) go to a local hardware store
3) remove one of the remaining bolts
and find something the same size.
But that's me.
 

Old Guy Bill

Supporting Member
Supporting Member
Joined
Sep 10, 2023
Posts
981
Reaction score
2,957
Location
KY
First Name
Bill
Truck Year
1978
Truck Model
K20
Engine Size
400
I believe my TH400 mount uses 7/16-14... but it's a '70s unit..
 

496bb

Full Access Member
Joined
Oct 9, 2023
Posts
106
Reaction score
106
Location
AL
First Name
CL
Truck Year
1987
Truck Model
Suburban R20
Engine Size
454
That’s what I was thinking too, just wondering if someone knew offhand. 87 was a real mixture of SAE/metric.
 

496bb

Full Access Member
Joined
Oct 9, 2023
Posts
106
Reaction score
106
Location
AL
First Name
CL
Truck Year
1987
Truck Model
Suburban R20
Engine Size
454
1) I'd get some tools,
2) go to a local hardware store
3) remove one of the remaining bolts
and find something the same size.
But that's me.
Wow, one in every group I guess
 

Radiohead

That guy on the Columbia
Joined
Mar 17, 2022
Posts
3,056
Reaction score
9,904
Location
Low Earth Orbit where it's safer
First Name
Eric
Truck Year
MCMLXXIX
Truck Model
C-20 Silverado Camper Special
Engine Size
454 crazy cubes, or 7.4 luscious litres
That’s what I was thinking too, just wondering if someone knew offhand. 87 was a real mixture of SAE/metric.
'79 ain't no picnic either. I get tired of the trek back and forth to the toolbox for different basis tools. At my shop, it's a trip up and down stairs outdoors.
 

DoubleDingo

Full Access Member
Joined
Jul 3, 2012
Posts
13,903
Reaction score
23,751
Location
Right where I am
First Name
Bagoomba
Truck Year
1981
Truck Model
81-C20 Silverado Camper Special-TH400-4.10s
Engine Size
Carb'ed Vortec 350
'79 ain't no picnic either. I get tired of the trek back and forth to the toolbox for different basis tools. At my shop, it's a trip up and down stairs outdoors.
Even my '81 is a mix of imperial and metric. First time I started tearing into things with my imperial tools and couldn't find a size that fit, I knew it was similar to my '91 Cherokee, where I needed a set of tools with both. My setup sounds similar to yours except mine is not up and down stairs, it's a 160-170 feet walk one-way to the tools. That's why I carry a small set in each vehicle, then only the specialty stuff requires "the walk". Even on my Jeep, I had one bolt missing on the trans-mount, went to the hardware store that carries a ton of bolts and screws and still couldn't find an exact match the other. It was a metric bolt, but it has an 11/16 imperial head and that measures 17.4mm, odd duck indeed.
 

Sad Sack

Supporting Member
Supporting Member
Joined
Sep 3, 2024
Posts
2,623
Reaction score
5,493
Location
Nebraska
First Name
Goober
Truck Year
1985
Truck Model
C15
Engine Size
305
Even my '81 is a mix of imperial and metric. First time I started tearing into things with my imperial tools and couldn't find a size that fit, I knew it was similar to my '91 Cherokee, where I needed a set of tools with both. My setup sounds similar to yours except mine is not up and down stairs, it's a 160-170 feet walk one-way to the tools. That's why I carry a small set in each vehicle, then only the specialty stuff requires "the walk". Even on my Jeep, I had one bolt missing on the trans-mount, went to the hardware store that carries a ton of bolts and screws and still couldn't find an exact match the other. It was a metric bolt, but it has an 11/16 imperial head and that measures 17.4mm, odd duck indeed.
Years back, way back, starting in ‘79 the misery started and then I believe (maybe) it was engine SAE and the rest metric. Sucked to have to buy more tools when wages weren’t even $3 an hour. Back then tools weren’t cheap. The 79 Monte Carlo I learned this from back then was an irritating experience.
 

KWMECH

Junior Member
Joined
Dec 28, 2025
Posts
6
Reaction score
8
Location
northern calif
First Name
kevin
Truck Year
1991
Truck Model
V2500 Suburban
Engine Size
350
Probably have it sorted by now but the Metric 10mm size is going to be a 1.5 pitch 25 or 30mm long, not 1.25 pitch. GM never used a fine thread in aluminum. 1.25 pitch is an asian thing
 

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
48,412
Posts
1,066,756
Members
42,790
Latest member
dpenfield
Top