105 Gearbox Question

Started by njh1964, February 27, 2012, 10:32:34 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

njh1964

Apologies for what may be a dumb question, but do all 105 gearboxes require the gear shift to be pushed down/in to shift into reverse, or is this just an early or late gearbox feature?

Regards,


Nick
Now:
1968 Alfa Romeo GT 1300 Junior - Complete Restoration Project
2002 Alfa Romeo 147 Twin Spark - Track Day Car
Previously:
1974 Alfasud TI - First Car

AikenDrum105

Just the early ones - you can fit a push down lever to a later gearbox with the automatic 5th/reverse lockout though - Mine is setup that way.  Pushing it down doesn't do anything - but it looks right :)   
Scott
'66 Giulia Super 105.28.720988 TS+MS3+ITB+COP
'65 Giulia Sprint GT 105.04.753710
'04 156 JTS Sportwagon

Earlier follies...
'66 Duetto 105.05.710057
'85 GTV6
'71 1750 GTV

njh1964

Hi Scott,

Do you happen to know if a later model shift assembly can be bolted straight onto a gearbox which originally came with a pushdown shift assembly?

I'm trying to make up one good gearbox from about two and a half spare gearboxes, one of which has the pushdown shift but is also missing the actual pushdown shift lever.

Regards,


Nick
Now:
1968 Alfa Romeo GT 1300 Junior - Complete Restoration Project
2002 Alfa Romeo 147 Twin Spark - Track Day Car
Previously:
1974 Alfasud TI - First Car

AikenDrum105

I might have a spare push-down if you need one - they're getting a bit thin on the ground, that's for sure. (and they can be buggers to get apart if you do have one that needs restored..)

You can fit a late lever without the pushdown to an early box - but I'm not 100% sure if you can replace the push-down interlock in the neck of the box with the auto-lockout interlock from a later box to match it. worst case you could remove the lockout completely - and just give the teeth a clean now and again going from 5th to 4th :)

It's pretty easy to take the vents off the turret of the gearbox and remove the lever joint - swap it and the interlock plate with the spring over and see how it goes...  the vents have shim rings that centralise the lever joint in the gate - you might have to muck around with these to get it smoothly returning to the middle 3rd/4th area of the gate,  and not bind against the 5th/reverse interlock....

Good fun:)


Cheers,



Scott
'66 Giulia Super 105.28.720988 TS+MS3+ITB+COP
'65 Giulia Sprint GT 105.04.753710
'04 156 JTS Sportwagon

Earlier follies...
'66 Duetto 105.05.710057
'85 GTV6
'71 1750 GTV

njh1964

Hi Scott,

What I was getting at may be best described in the below diagram. Assuming part "A" is a gearbox which originally came with a pushdown shift version of part "B", could you just replace the pushdown shift version of part "B" with a later model (ie non-pushdown shift) version part of "B"?

In other words, can you graft a later model shift tower and housing onto an earlier model gearbox?

Thanks for your help on this.

Regards,


Nick
Now:
1968 Alfa Romeo GT 1300 Junior - Complete Restoration Project
2002 Alfa Romeo 147 Twin Spark - Track Day Car
Previously:
1974 Alfasud TI - First Car

AikenDrum105

Oh...

I'm not sure :)  I have a niggly thought about the size of bearing(s) in the back of the tower being different - and/or that they may be shimmed to a clearance during assembly of the split case / turret... - but that may all be based in fantasy :)

Vin Sharp would be the first person I'd personally think of to ask that question.

If this just to get the later lever / lockout I'm pretty sure it will be easier to migrate the upper part of the mechanism in the turret  - But if you need to make a full gearbox out of differing series parts that might be a measure as you go process :)

Sorry if that's not particularly helpful :) 

Cheers,
Scott
'66 Giulia Super 105.28.720988 TS+MS3+ITB+COP
'65 Giulia Sprint GT 105.04.753710
'04 156 JTS Sportwagon

Earlier follies...
'66 Duetto 105.05.710057
'85 GTV6
'71 1750 GTV