my trans is in good shape so far. but I guess if I need help with a rebuild I will just ship the trans to you and have you do it or you could help me and make it a learning experience.
I think my wife would kill me if I did another transmission rebuild in the garage. She's already complaining about the smell (gear oil). I've no problem helping out it's just this isn't really a one-day job. With things somewhat resembling the OEM SST's it still took me ~2 days to pull everything apart and the organizing, cleaning, and inspection took much longer than that.
Random question for you though, have you ever gotten your Miata or RX-7 stuck in reverse (see below)?
Long post ahead. I made a lot of progress this weekend and then took half a step back in the end. Starting from where I left off...
Getting everything ready for the next level of assembly:
I'm obviously skipping a few steps here. Shift rods, clutch forks, etc. installed. Ready to install the intermediate housing:
Intermediate housing on, shift rod ends installed, and speedo drive gear in place. Note the change in lighting. I had to take breaks to let the silicone cure between housings. Ready to install bell and extension housings.
Bell and extension housings assembled. I think I went a bit overboard with the silicone...
Front bearings installed. The little snap ring on the input shaft was a PITA to install. I had to "modify" it slightly so my snap ring pliers could get a grip.
Front cover installed with gasket and bearing shim. There was another one of those "the EM is wrong" moments here. You have to set the front bearing "play" to 0-.004 inches but the way the EM has you measured the clearance is incorrect. Fortunately I figured it out and between the leftover shims I have from the original RX-7 and Miata transmissions I had exactly what I needed.
All finished...
...or so I thought. After the silicone cured I decided to slap on a stock shift lever and test out the gears. A quick row from 1-5 to neutral and everything checked out. Went to test reverse I found I couldn't get it to engage! I checked the other gears again and all were locked out! A quick spin of the input shaft told me it was already in reverse (boom05) In a frenzy I quickly pulled the extension housing and all it's pieces off, which were only recently installed, and discovered somehow I managed to shift into reverse while going from 5th to neutral. This morning a quick internet search showed this is quite common in Miatas and RX-7's although I'd never heard about it. Apparently this spring:
on the front of the 5th/reverse shift rod puts a good amount of force in the reverse direction. Shifting too quickly from 5th into neutral or too slowly from reverse into neutral seems to be the primary causes although some have reported this is worse with worn shifter bushings. I'm guessing what happened to me was when I released 5th gear into reverse (didn't 'guide' it) the force of the spring boosted the forward momentum of the rod, which somehow carried it into reverse at the precise moment I moved the selector rod into neutral. It probably didn't help that I had only 1/2 the shifter bushings installed and that the transmission was vertical so gravity was acting in reverse's favor. What's most annoying is there is a fix that can be done without removing the extension housing involving a screwdriver through the reverse switch port. Had I waited a few hours I would have discovered this and not had to remove the extension housing and associated pieces. Now I get to scrape off all the silicone and go through that process again. Either way, the transmission is essentially done so it'll be time to move onto the next task soon.