pontiac fiero
automatic transmission shift bracket (with or without optional boot)
Production parts shown.
brackets NOW AVAILABLE!
This is a reproduction of the Fiero automatic transmission shift boot retaining bracket which fits all 1985-1988 automatic transmission equipped production Pontiac Fiero cars with a glue-on boot. I have read online that the glue-on type bracket will NOT fit the 1984 Fiero consoles, but I have not been able to confirm.
Also suitable for Zimmer QuickSilver cars, and as all of them were based on 1986-1987 Fieros, these should fit all QuickSilvers.
I went looking for a replacement "glue on" automatic shift boot bracket for my Zimmer QuickSilver - a coachbuilt car based on the 1986/1987 Fiero SE - and learned they were no longer available as they were discontinued decades ago by GM and every used one I could find was broken. I didn't want the elastic band version as it can bend the tab around the opening and often comes loose.
Using my original as a guide, I had it re-drawn in CAD and offer them as 3D-printed parts in two different types of material - Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM) and Multi Jet Fusion (MJF). For those who don't know the difference, FDM is the typical home-use style that uses a filament of material on a spool and usually have a very poor, coarse surface. MJF, on the other hand, is a much more expensive process that uses a powder and a fusing agent that results in a higher strength part with better surface quality.
Learn more about the differences between FDM and MJF here.
Also suitable for Zimmer QuickSilver cars, and as all of them were based on 1986-1987 Fieros, these should fit all QuickSilvers.
I went looking for a replacement "glue on" automatic shift boot bracket for my Zimmer QuickSilver - a coachbuilt car based on the 1986/1987 Fiero SE - and learned they were no longer available as they were discontinued decades ago by GM and every used one I could find was broken. I didn't want the elastic band version as it can bend the tab around the opening and often comes loose.
Using my original as a guide, I had it re-drawn in CAD and offer them as 3D-printed parts in two different types of material - Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM) and Multi Jet Fusion (MJF). For those who don't know the difference, FDM is the typical home-use style that uses a filament of material on a spool and usually have a very poor, coarse surface. MJF, on the other hand, is a much more expensive process that uses a powder and a fusing agent that results in a higher strength part with better surface quality.
Learn more about the differences between FDM and MJF here.