| On Sun, 22 Jun 1997, Chad Jester wrote:
> I've owned a dozen '74 - '76 TR6's....three with less than 25K miles.
> NONE of them had any provision to lift the shifter when shifting into
> reverse.
> 
> I have had many of these levers apart and there is no obvious mechanical
> requirement to lift the lever, even if you could.  There is a spring
> loaded "detent" but you actuate it by pushing the shift lever sideways.
 
TR gearboxes through early TR6 had a step in the reverse selector that
acted as a reverse lockout.  You have to lift the lever to clear the step
before you can get into reverse.
Later TR6 gearboxes have a ramp in the selector instead of the step.  This
let you move the lever into reverse by applying extra pressure to the
right, but you don't have to lift.
I don't know when that change was made.  Perhaps someone with a TR6 parts
manual can tell us.
 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Chip Old                      1948 M.G. TC  TC6710  NEMGTR #2271
Cub Hill, Maryland            1962 Triumph TR4  CT3154LO (daily driver)
fold@mail.bcpl.lib.md.us
 
If cars had evolved as fast as computers have, by now they'd cost a
quarter, run for a year on a half-gallon of gas, and explode once a day. 
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