Originally Posted by
NWGACarGuy
THANKS! I appreciate the feedback. The shop put the bolt in to hold the new poly type bushings in place, and eliminated the wobble there that contributed to the slop. I don't know whether to be glad or disappointed to learn that all the other shifters you have seen have the same bushings and application. I have a weighted stainless steel ball shift **** coming in that should help settle things a little more. And now, having seen the actual assembly, I think I need to be more precise in my shifting technique and pay more attention to where I am in the gear pattern and locations. I have mostly had 4 gears to work with over the years, and these 6 are a lot closer together than what I am used to.
It is baffling to me that I have been unable to find these bushings in any diagram or numbered parts listing. All the bushing I could find and order looked just like you would expect them to look, and not at all like these red ones. Maybe I am just looking in all the wrong places (there is a song in there somewhere...) but the parts departments and vendors that I talked with could not find them either. They seem not to be a known item for either Chrysler or Mercedes.
Great advice to step back (off the ledge) and let the frustrations diminish. I think I will just drive the car (if it cooperates!) and try to be less in-tune with the things that could use improvement or fixing. With more driving and less wrenching I might remember why I bought the car in the first place.
You are also right about the title. I was referring to the fact that I could not find a part number or depiction of the bushings, but the real points of the post are not indicated by the title at all, and it is not at all clear whether I am offering help or asking for it! Thanks again for the feedback.
I want to make it clear that I did NOT use profanity or vulgar language where the four asterisks **** appear in my post. I did NOT put them there, and the word that was apparently censored is a common term for the item that is installed at the top of a stick shift and grasped by the hand to move the shifter. I guess in someone's vernacular it is considered a "bad word", but I can't imagine why or how it could possibly be misconstrued in my post. Perhaps this is AI hard at work improving the quality of our lives through technology? At any rate, the "you know what" that I am swapping out will hopefully improve the shifting!