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Date:         Tue, 3 May 2005 18:18:54 -0500
Reply-To:     Chuck Kuecker <ckuecker@CKENT.ORG>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Chuck Kuecker <ckuecker@CKENT.ORG>
Subject:      Re: Need Automatic Transmission
In-Reply-To:  <6.2.1.2.2.20050502095645.041c6c58@66.51.205.14>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed

At 12:10 05/02/2005, jbange wrote: >At 08:37 AM 5/2/2005, you wrote: >>I >>think yu must remove this adj screw all the way out,remove the valve >>body,install the piston pinand piston,install the adj screw pin and screw, >>and then the valve body. 2 hours work.Once again this is easy easy easy.If >>you need help, I will tellyou the details of valve body removelGood luck, > >Yeah, I looked over the pics in the bentley and see what you mean. I >actually already have the unit partially disassembled, down to where I can >see the two ends of the 2nd gear band and the piston shaft wedged up over >the band end. I couldn't pull the 2nd gear drum out yesterday, but I'm >hoping I can weasel it loose if I loosen the adjuster like you say. My main >concern is with what I broke. The one part I got out is a small rectangular >wafer with a channel milled across it. It's not visibly broken, so it >apparently was being held in by what broke. I can see the edge of the >broken piece and, from the rough texture of the break, it appears to have >been part of a cast part(rather than forged/milled). My guess is that it's >a piece of the case. Probably a critical piece which renders the case >unusable. I'm always very diligent when I break something and make sure I >render the as much of the device inoperable as possible with the least >amount of effort. :) > >John Bange >'90 Vanagon "Geldsauger"

You definitely need to remove the band adjuster all the way - and the piston, too.

That rectangular piece sounds like the key that holds the reverse clutch outer ring in place. It just slide into a square slot in the housing.

I took my tranny apart enough times to be intimately familiar with those little chunks of metal...

Chuck Kuecker '91 GL


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