OK, OK, I confess! It was me! Taught me a lesson.

-Bryan
Awesome Richard, glad you got that bad boy running again! Let us know how it progresses.rjkoop wrote:So I think my rebuild is fine. Happy about that for sure.
My big mistake was not taking enough pictures while taking it apart and laying out the parts EXACTLY the way they came out (eg. orientation). There are so many things that are very similar but aren't the same. I kind of took the approach that I'll take everything apart, generally put things in order but the manuals for putting back together are a little vague. Also get the right tools (eg. bearing puller) helps a lot. Rather than forcing/hammering things.Nut124 wrote:Koop, I hope it runs great.
I have a trans in my garage that I took out for hard 2nd gear shifting. I would like to try and fix it.
What did you use for guidance, direction when assessing condition of parts, rebuilding?
When you say "hard shifting", do you mean it grinds gears when you shift into second, or it is just physically hard to push it into 2nd gear? The former is likely a worn synchro or shifting collar, while the latter could be everything from the wrong transmission oil (especially when cold) to something binding in the shifting mechanism from the shift knob all the way to the internals of the transmission.Nut124 wrote:I have a trans in my garage that I took out for hard 2nd gear shifting. I would like to try and fix it.
Bryan, I very much appreciate the offer to help.18Fiatsandcounting wrote:When you say "hard shifting", do you mean it grinds gears when you shift into second, or it is just physically hard to push it into 2nd gear? The former is likely a worn synchro or shifting collar, while the latter could be everything from the wrong transmission oil (especially when cold) to something binding in the shifting mechanism from the shift knob all the way to the internals of the transmission.Nut124 wrote:I have a trans in my garage that I took out for hard 2nd gear shifting. I would like to try and fix it.
As we speak, the transmission for my '69 is completely torn apart and laying on my workbench, so I'm happy to offer advice on how it goes back together. It is a rather intricate device, but it's also rather amazing in its design and space efficiency. Works quite well when everything is as it should be. I'm now awaiting on about $1000 worth of parts for a complete rebuild.![]()
-Bryan
Yep, grinding definitely means your synchros are not as fast as you are. If you slowly ease it into gear, sometimes you can avoid that "grind me a pound while you're at it" sound every time you shift, but few of us on this forum would put up with that for very long.Nut124 wrote:In the old trans, there was grinding upon attempting to shift to 2nd. I drove that trans hard for 20 years.
How do you assess whether or not the bearings need to be replaced? Or just do it while in there?