I recently purchased a 2008 DF25 V-twin that the seller told me had an issue with shifting out of reverse. I looked it over and found that it would shift into F and back to N just fine, but shift to R and it woiuld lock into R and be impossible to get back to N. I'm a lifetime mechanic with a lot of experience in such things and felt it would likely be a linkage problem or similar, so bought it.
Well, it's turned out to be not so simple. I've had the lower unit gears apart several times now and replaced the gouged shift cam with no joy. "Very" carefully checked components against the exploded view in the service manual and all are there and in the correct positions.
I should mention, too, that he gave me a box of odds & ends that I just glanced at. When I got home, looked them over and found a shift lever (this is a tiller motor) that's badly scraped on 2 sides - not parallel or inline. Looks like it was dropped and dragged across very coarse concrete - but there is no other damage to the motor - not even a scratch on the paint. Can't figure out how someone managed that.
With the motor in F, the prop will turn freely a few degrees back and forth before taking up the slack in the dog clutch, then locks solidly into F and you can turn the motor over with the prop.
Put it in N and it spins free and clear. Now put it in R and turn the prop and it turns a few degrees back & forth, just as in F, but then if you put pressure on it, you can....uh....pop it ?? over a resistance for a few degrees before it pops back to free turning. It wont turn the motor over - it slips. When it's in "free turn" mode, it shifts out of R just fine. When it's on the resistance, the gearshift is locked solidly and can't be moved.
It appears that the dog clutch isn't pushing all the way into mesh with the R gear and under pressure it cams itself up and over the clutch faces and this puts huge pressure on the push rod and shift cam, thereby causing the divot on the shift cam.
Disconnect the upper and lower shift rods, shift into R and it makes no difference. The divot on the shift cam is in the proper place to show that it's going all the way down into what should be R....but the gear and clutch don't match that. Shift detents for all 3 positions seem to be fine. Linkage isn't an issue - this is all inside the gear case.
Pushrod doesn't appear damaged. All components are in place. None are missing or doubled up. How can it shift fine into N & F, but not into R ?? Yes, it appears that the motor was dropped and/or dragged very hard on the shift lever but how could that affect R inside the gear case ??
Well, it's turned out to be not so simple. I've had the lower unit gears apart several times now and replaced the gouged shift cam with no joy. "Very" carefully checked components against the exploded view in the service manual and all are there and in the correct positions.
I should mention, too, that he gave me a box of odds & ends that I just glanced at. When I got home, looked them over and found a shift lever (this is a tiller motor) that's badly scraped on 2 sides - not parallel or inline. Looks like it was dropped and dragged across very coarse concrete - but there is no other damage to the motor - not even a scratch on the paint. Can't figure out how someone managed that.
With the motor in F, the prop will turn freely a few degrees back and forth before taking up the slack in the dog clutch, then locks solidly into F and you can turn the motor over with the prop.
Put it in N and it spins free and clear. Now put it in R and turn the prop and it turns a few degrees back & forth, just as in F, but then if you put pressure on it, you can....uh....pop it ?? over a resistance for a few degrees before it pops back to free turning. It wont turn the motor over - it slips. When it's in "free turn" mode, it shifts out of R just fine. When it's on the resistance, the gearshift is locked solidly and can't be moved.
It appears that the dog clutch isn't pushing all the way into mesh with the R gear and under pressure it cams itself up and over the clutch faces and this puts huge pressure on the push rod and shift cam, thereby causing the divot on the shift cam.
Disconnect the upper and lower shift rods, shift into R and it makes no difference. The divot on the shift cam is in the proper place to show that it's going all the way down into what should be R....but the gear and clutch don't match that. Shift detents for all 3 positions seem to be fine. Linkage isn't an issue - this is all inside the gear case.
Pushrod doesn't appear damaged. All components are in place. None are missing or doubled up. How can it shift fine into N & F, but not into R ?? Yes, it appears that the motor was dropped and/or dragged very hard on the shift lever but how could that affect R inside the gear case ??
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