Geo Hahn
Yoda
Offline
I've done this but darned if I can remember...
When removing or refitting a TR gearbox (it's a TR4 but it's the same drill on a 3, 4A, 250 and possibly a 6) the only tricky bit is getting the clutch fork operating arm to clear the opening in the floorboard (the one by the accelerator on a LHD car).
I recall that to do this one rotates the whole gearbox before it is fully disengaged from the engine/clutch, but...
Which direction does one rotate it?
Last time it came out pretty easily (don't recall which way I rotated it) but went back in with difficulty (I had it rotated clockwise when offered to the clutch and was trying to rotate it counter clockwise and getting interference from that operating arm.
Last time was with a standard gearbox which I was strong enough to man-handle. Replacement going in this time is the heavier OD and I'm hoping that finesse will offset the greater weight.
Thanks for the insight!
When removing or refitting a TR gearbox (it's a TR4 but it's the same drill on a 3, 4A, 250 and possibly a 6) the only tricky bit is getting the clutch fork operating arm to clear the opening in the floorboard (the one by the accelerator on a LHD car).
I recall that to do this one rotates the whole gearbox before it is fully disengaged from the engine/clutch, but...
Which direction does one rotate it?
Last time it came out pretty easily (don't recall which way I rotated it) but went back in with difficulty (I had it rotated clockwise when offered to the clutch and was trying to rotate it counter clockwise and getting interference from that operating arm.
Last time was with a standard gearbox which I was strong enough to man-handle. Replacement going in this time is the heavier OD and I'm hoping that finesse will offset the greater weight.
Thanks for the insight!
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