The transmission end of the z bar linkage goes into the hole circled in red. The other end bolts to the frame rail. Reinsatll it and your transmission will shift fine.
Unless I’m forgetting disassembling something, that part was never engaged in anything. When I installed the headers last year, I noticed it seemed useless since it didn’t do anything.The transmission end of the z bar linkage goes into the hole circled in red. The other end bolts to the frame rail. Reinsatll it and your transmission will shift fine.
View attachment 1715527010
Yes this does make senseOne more thing, I do remember that ever since buying the car, it never would go into 1st gear. Park, reverse, neutral, drive, second, not first. After engaging in neutral, the shifter wouldn't quite line up with the indexes on the console. Hope that makes sense.
and then you line up the 0* dot ? wow. beginners may be better off with a simple timing set with only 1 keyway and 1 dot on lower sprocketIt was at 6 o’clock. We figured out that I had used the wrong keyway. I was supposed to have used the triangle keyway for 4* advance, but I had it installed in the rectangular keyway, which would’ve given me 4* retarded.
and then you line up the 0* dot ? wow. beginners may be better off with a simple timing set with only 1 keyway and 1 dot on lower sprocket
If the Park Pawl is jammed, the trans can still be shifted as you describe. Notice in the first image below, the Park rod is spring loaded on one end. This is so you can put the trans in the Park position with the shifter, but the car may have to roll a few inches on occasion, until the spring shoots the parkrod into the pawl when things line up. You can see the pawl in the second picture, and the lock-ring it engages.
In the third pic you can see the loc-ring mounted onto the output shaft.
Ok but here's the thing; After park has been successfully engaged, And if it jamms in there, that same flexibility allows you to move the shift lever, except now it feels like crap.
So
All you gotta do is un-jam the park rod.
So put the trans in any gear except park; then just gently rock the car back and forth, until it pops out. If the lever will not stay out of park, zip-tie it in reverse or neutral so it HAS to stay out of park.
IDK if it's possible, but if your 727, Park position has never worked right; perhaps someone installed a 904 parkrod in there. I know the 727rod won't go into a 904, I figured that out one time,lol. But I don't know about the other way.
Take a look at those park rods they are different.
And finally, if it just won't come out, I suppose the parkrod has become disengaged from the roostercomb, and you will have to
drop the pan.
and the VB
to re-engage it. and secure it with the E-clip
View attachment 1715527036View attachment 1715527034View attachment 1715527041
I think it's the other way around; for some unknown reason the Parkrod is jammed, and because it is jammed, it causing the trans to rotate Once the rear tires are off the ground, the trans at it's nomally installed working angle, and the tires both turn by hand; the parkrod would normally not be preloaded and should pop tight out.I think that might be preventing the mechanism inside from disengaging as well.
I disagree. It wasn’t hard to figure out by reading the documentation included.
I think it's the other way around; for some unknown reason the Parkrod is jammed, and because it is jammed, it causing the trans to rotate Once the rear tires are off the ground, the trans at it's nomally installed working angle, and the tires both turn by hand; the parkrod would normally not be preloaded and should pop tight out.
If it doesn't, you have two choices; 1) pop the tailshaft off and drive the rod forward and unlocking the pawl, or
2) drop the VB and pull the rod out.
I noticed the front of your trans is quite high. I suppose the driveshaft angle may be jamming it up. I don't think so, but I also don't know so , on account of I've never encountered a problem with that.
I disagree;
Each tooth on the sprocket represents I think 14*. If you botch the install and don't degree it for verification... your cam could be 14* retarded or 14* advanced. But if the keyway in the cam is off be a couple of degrees, then you gotta throw that into the pot, same with the crank keyway, and chain stretch. So if you don't degree your cam there is a lotta lotta room for error
Those dots and symbols are just there to help you find a base line.
To help you understand what say, 4degrees means;
4* advanced from straight up represents about 5 or 6 psi cylinder pressure increase. No big deal if you have low-cylinder pressure to begin with; and 4* advance also causes your power peak to come down about 100 rpm.
Of course 4* retard does the opposite. So just 4* either way represents a total difference of ~12 psi and 200 rpm.
And we haven't even talked about tuning issues.
What about 14*?
Well; I recently met a guy online that had discovered exactly that and found his cam advanced one tooth; and his engine was not happy about that,nor was he.
On one of my old 318s, decades ago, I advanced her 1 tooth and ran it with a worn out 340 chain ......... for many years. Money was tight, but I had these parts hanging on the wall, so .........badBoom!we won a lot of races retarded one tooth the advancec back some
low gears stocker
no cheater cams allowed
And you know what?;I wasn't trying to take a shortcut, I just simply didn't understand the importance.
if the cam is not out a tooth
applys to this statement.I wasn't trying to take a shortcut, I just simply didn't understand the importance.
So I am not referencing the Distributor or timing at all.but I skipped degreeing the cam when I assembled the engine.
makes perfect sense.And you know what?;
chances are very good
that if the cam is not out a tooth,
your cam will have fallen into an acceptable zone.
It's been said that 2* either way cannot be felt by your butt-dyno.
And I can add that my butt-dyno cannot absolutely feel 8*advanced from 4*. I could only tell by knowing what to look for ........ but the thing is I started out with 180psi,lol.
From 8* advanced to 4* retarded, that I for sure felt! and was remarkable to me.
The way your post is written;
this quote ;
applys to this statement.
So I am not referencing the Distributor or timing at all.
And so to me, this post;
makes perfect sense.
At least to me,lol.
And we all know, that the distributor timing has nothing to do with cam timing; you can drop the D in any where you want to and just synchronize #1 TDC Compression to any tower that the rotor is pointing to when the reluctor lines up with a vane, any vane, and then that tower will be #1.
Of course there are some tower choices, that are better than others.
I had this bad feeling when others were recommending Righty Tighty go to the 4° cam advance on his first time engine build. Too many variables for him for things to go wrong.
Should have gone with the single keyway roller chain and gear set, set straight up. Dots set to 12 O'clock on the cam gear and 12 O'clock on the crank gear.
Drop the distributor in with # 1 up on compression.
Would have been done by now so he could get onto more important things.
The way your post is written;
this quote ;
applys to this statement.
So I am not referencing the Distributor or timing at all.
And so to me, this post;
makes perfect sense.
At least to me,lol.
And we all know, that the distributor timing has nothing to do with cam timing; you can drop the D in any where you want to and just synchronize #1 TDC Compression to any tower that the rotor is pointing to when the reluctor lines up with a vane, any vane, and then that tower will be #1.
Of course there are some tower choices, that are better than others.
No problem; I sensed you were frustrated with me so I was pretty sure there was a miscommunication somewhere. Glad you figured it out.So, thanks for your patience and I'm sorry to put you through all that!