Getting ready to tweak and then reinstall the shift lever of my 1957 3100. It came apart in my hands the other day (after a long run) when the aftermarket anti-rattle spring broke in half. Two little retaining too-dads went flying and I was cruising through a busy intersection with a unconnected shift handle in my hand.
At any rate, I’ll be checking the alignment on the shift gates and adjusting everything according to the service manual because the spring may have broken under the stress of a mis-aligned something. But while I was at it, I had a look at the assembly manual (Section 7,
Sheet 4.00) and noticed a couple of things. First, there’s a note there about the width of the sheet metal shift handle opening that I had not seen before. It shows a requirement that the opening be maintained at
between 1.001 and 1.011 inches. Now, that’s a pretty tight tolerance, and mine was WAY wider than that. I think mostly because it seemed near impossible to assemble the dang thing the last time I tried and I had to keep widening the opening to get all of the constellations in alignment for it to pop on.
Secondly, the diagram shows a “
Bushing Assembly” inside the shift handle, at the end of the ball knob (#3720927). Never seen one of those before and I’ve bought a few of these shift handles (while trying to find a ‘truck’ one).
Questions are:
1. Is there a magic way to hold the little round bullet catches in place while wiggling the handle end over the top of them while you hold them on the anti-rattle spring? I closed the end of my shaft some and have a feeling this is going to be a bugger.
2. Do I need to source the bushing assembly shown to keep this from happening again?
Thanks much,
Jim