Don't really like the idea of gluing them on so will probably drill it.
Carried on rebuilding the engine today. It was a lovely sunny day and sooo peaceful, so I had the garage door wide open & was just pottering about. Who ever rebuilt this engine didn't put the rear crankshaft oil seal in fully for some reason.
Oil pickup in place, sump on, clutch on.........
I'm going to clean the gearbox up tomorrow & have a look at the internals to make sure all is OK.
Sprintless for the first time in 35+ years. ... Still Sprintless.
Engines, Gearboxes, Overdrives etc. rebuilt. PM me.
Cleaned up the gearbox this morning & popped the cover off. All looks fine. Looks like it's had a new cross shaft & taper pin recently (well recently before it got stored in a garage for 19 years ).
The inhibitor on the side is for the reversing lights, the one on the top is for the overdrive unit on 3rd & 4th gears (standard). The large bolt to the right can be taken out & another inhibitor switch added. If you then connect two wires from one switch to the other you will have O/D on second as well...simples.
Sprintless for the first time in 35+ years. ... Still Sprintless.
Engines, Gearboxes, Overdrives etc. rebuilt. PM me.
I must admit, I don't know. I know they exist but I've never come across one without the bolt. I'm pretty sure you can drill & tap it though as the gear selecter rail still has the detent in it.
Sprintless for the first time in 35+ years. ... Still Sprintless.
Engines, Gearboxes, Overdrives etc. rebuilt. PM me.
If it doesn't have that hole then the top cover has probably been replaced at some point. Every sprint box I've seen has it but I don't think it's there on stags. There appear to be 6 different versions of that part used on the tr6 so some of them might not have it.
Its all to do with TR6 production which is where the Sprint box came from. When the A type overdrive was used, it had o/d on second as standard, but when the J type started to be used it was 3 & 4 only. When the J type was introduced it was an easy fix to the thousands of covers 'on the shelf' was to simply use a blanking bolt to fill the superfluous hole. Thereafter, as new batches of covers were cast it was a simple delete operation of drilling and tapping to save a few pence per cover. It will therefore be generally a later assembled gearbox which will have the boss but no hole
First I use a wire brush attachment on the drill. Then a bit of wire wool to get into the fiddly places. Finish off with a couple of coats of silver spray.
Sprintless for the first time in 35+ years. ... Still Sprintless.
Engines, Gearboxes, Overdrives etc. rebuilt. PM me.