On a side note, anyone have a good all-inclusive W58 swap writeup?


5th Gear (Or Any Other Gear) Pop-Out
Unfortunately, there is a lot of misinformation out there about 5th gear pop-out
(or any gear for that matter) being caused by worn syncros or some other problem
with the syncros. The truth is, the synchronizer rings have absolutely nothing to
do with a transmission staying in a gear or popping out of a gear. Synchronizers
only function is to "spin up" the gears as the engagement hub approaches the gear.
For a detailed look check out HowStuffWorks: Manual Transmissions They have
an excellent section about manual transmissions and synchronizers.
On the problem of 5th gear pop out, there are two sources of problems that can
effect the "pop-out" issue. It doesn't matter if it is 5th gear or 2nd and it doesn't
matter if it is a Toyota transaxle or a Renault. Gear pop-out is related to movement
in the transmission. This movement can either be external or internal.
jondee86 wrote:The above lifted from http://www.wcengineering.com/articles/popout.html
Most likely causes will be missing or faulty detent, bent shifter fork or some
other issue that prevents the gears from engaging fully. Talk to the shop and
see what they say.
Cheers... jondee86
allencr wrote:No, it is not the clutch.
No, it is not the syncro ring.
Going into 2nd all the way, shifter travel as far for 2nd as 4th?
How far does it take to engage 2nd? Idling in neutral, push clutch down about 3/4 or more and start pushing shifter into 2nd, feeling when 2nd's teeth/dogs just start touching & bumping along against each other. Then pedal down all the way, to figure out how far the shifter travels between just starting to engage to going all the way in 2nd.
InfernoAE86 wrote:If it were either of those issues, though, would it shift smoothly and operably,
while the car is off? It worked fine on the bench, is why I asked.

allencr wrote:Didn't care about the clutch pedal at all, only about the distance needed to move the shift lever from when the dogs just begin to touch until the lever is fully home into 2nd.
Probably like TORPARTS writes above, even when parts are almost symmetrical & can be assembled wrong, it doesn't take too much looking at the part to see that it it won't work too well assembled that way and that checking a manual can save a lot of grief.