Thanks for the details, Bob. Just came back from WA and a Manny tranny installation. Drove for 2 days afterwards with lots of stops and starts (and
parking). Ran great till about an hour & half from home yesterday (hot day, mountains, lots of manual upshift and down shifting). Stopped for a
bathroom break, and just as I got into the bathroom I felt the coach moving. Ran to the front, VERY quickly scootched the dog off the seat and
slammed the brakes on. I had lost 'Park'. All other gears worked fine. As I ran through the shifter, I noticed that the indicator stopped a bit
farther to the left with each gear change - S was right on, L pretty close, D 1/3rd between D & N, N 1/2 way to R, R very close to P and P never
seemed to 'stick it'.
Called Manny, told him what happened, what i saw with the shift indicator on the column and he said that the linkage likely just needs to be adjusted.
Found the section in the maintenance manual regarding adjusting the linkage. Just seemed a bit brief. Thought I would check in here to see if there
was a bit more beef to the procedure. Seems not!
The shop never gave me any indication that there was a problem with the shift cable or any other components so I am hoping that it just needs
adjusting and not replacing. New tranny so I can't see it being anything internal. Fortunately I do have a working parking brake (though it doesn't
hold great - need to look at adjusting that too I guess).
Manny gave me go ahead to drive the rest of the way (everything but Park works great) and with the exception of rolling backwards, toward the highway
(a nice safe ditch would have stopped us first) it was a very nice trip overall. Met up with another GMCer in Bellingham (Hey Jeff), toured around the
Skagit region for a few days, (Sedro-Woolley has a decent little RV park), bought goat cheese in Bow and met the goats (I'm a vet tech and miss my
goats). Huge difference between the new transmission and the old. Old one worked fine - never any shifting, slippage issues (except when the fluid
was low - seal leaks were the reason for the new tranny while one was available), but the new one is smooth and just 'feels tighter' if that means
anything.
Now we are home, and the tranny has cooled down and I have had a good night's sleep, we will head out and crawl underneath and see what's what. She's
already chocked so I should be good to go.
Scary seeing your coach moving and you are NOT behind the wheel!! At least I was inside and could quickly run to the brakes. So that is my 'golden
lining' on this episode.
--
Deb McWade
Logan Lake, BC, CAN
"Li'l Sister"
'77 Kingsley, 403, EBL EFI;
TZE167V101404
It's Bigger on the Inside!
parking). Ran great till about an hour & half from home yesterday (hot day, mountains, lots of manual upshift and down shifting). Stopped for a
bathroom break, and just as I got into the bathroom I felt the coach moving. Ran to the front, VERY quickly scootched the dog off the seat and
slammed the brakes on. I had lost 'Park'. All other gears worked fine. As I ran through the shifter, I noticed that the indicator stopped a bit
farther to the left with each gear change - S was right on, L pretty close, D 1/3rd between D & N, N 1/2 way to R, R very close to P and P never
seemed to 'stick it'.
Called Manny, told him what happened, what i saw with the shift indicator on the column and he said that the linkage likely just needs to be adjusted.
Found the section in the maintenance manual regarding adjusting the linkage. Just seemed a bit brief. Thought I would check in here to see if there
was a bit more beef to the procedure. Seems not!
The shop never gave me any indication that there was a problem with the shift cable or any other components so I am hoping that it just needs
adjusting and not replacing. New tranny so I can't see it being anything internal. Fortunately I do have a working parking brake (though it doesn't
hold great - need to look at adjusting that too I guess).
Manny gave me go ahead to drive the rest of the way (everything but Park works great) and with the exception of rolling backwards, toward the highway
(a nice safe ditch would have stopped us first) it was a very nice trip overall. Met up with another GMCer in Bellingham (Hey Jeff), toured around the
Skagit region for a few days, (Sedro-Woolley has a decent little RV park), bought goat cheese in Bow and met the goats (I'm a vet tech and miss my
goats). Huge difference between the new transmission and the old. Old one worked fine - never any shifting, slippage issues (except when the fluid
was low - seal leaks were the reason for the new tranny while one was available), but the new one is smooth and just 'feels tighter' if that means
anything.
Now we are home, and the tranny has cooled down and I have had a good night's sleep, we will head out and crawl underneath and see what's what. She's
already chocked so I should be good to go.
Scary seeing your coach moving and you are NOT behind the wheel!! At least I was inside and could quickly run to the brakes. So that is my 'golden
lining' on this episode.
--
Deb McWade
Logan Lake, BC, CAN
"Li'l Sister"
'77 Kingsley, 403, EBL EFI;
TZE167V101404
It's Bigger on the Inside!