demonboy
Well-Known Member
Can\'t engage forward gear - WE\'RE STUCK!!!!!!
We have an ongoing problem with engaging forward gear and our boat yard cannot sort it out. We have spent hundreds of euros getting the gear box stripped down, the clutch plate rebuilt, and so on, but the problem keeps re-occurring.
In a nutshell: when pushing the gear lever into forwards, nothing happens. There is no satisfactory 'clunk' which we get when putting into reverse. After 10 minutes or so of constantly trying this it occasionally engages. After motoring for half an hour or so, the gear appears to engage and disengage fairly satisfactorily. This morning, however, no matter how many times I put the lever into the forward position, nothing happened.
Two years ago the clutch plate was rebuilt as the first cause of the problem offered was that the plate was slipping. Fair enough.....after a repair job the problem appeared to go away for a while. Since then the problem started again and so we have had the gear box stripped and serviced. Twice. The mechanics SWEAR there is nothing wrong with the gear box and indeed claim it is in very good condition. They demonstrated this by manually engaging the clutch lever (the one on the side of the gear box) into both forward and reverse with satisfactory clunks in both directions.
So, because the clutch plate has been repaired and because the gear box is seemingly in good order we were then told that the gear lever on the binnacle was wearing out and was not moving the morse cable far enough. A couple of sprays of WD40 later we were told that before starting the engine we spend 10 minutes moving the gear lever forwards and backwards to ensure that any salt or dirt trapped in the gear lever teeth would be freed up. This dirt, we were told, was the cause of the problem. Well, if this is the problem this isn't exactly a practical work-around. We were told we would eventually have to replace the gear lever. However we have thoroughly investigated the point at which the clutch lever engages and disengages and there is absolutely nothing wrong with the cable. The cable pulls the clutch lever arm far enough back to engage forwards gear.
I appreciate this is a problem that can't really be solved without someone taking a look at this in situ, but I would be interested to know if (a) this sounds familiar to anyone and (b) if there are any simple checks I could do to help me tick off possible causes. It's driving Liz and myself mad!
It's a Perkins Prima M60 engine and Hurth gearbox dating back to 1989.
We have an ongoing problem with engaging forward gear and our boat yard cannot sort it out. We have spent hundreds of euros getting the gear box stripped down, the clutch plate rebuilt, and so on, but the problem keeps re-occurring.
In a nutshell: when pushing the gear lever into forwards, nothing happens. There is no satisfactory 'clunk' which we get when putting into reverse. After 10 minutes or so of constantly trying this it occasionally engages. After motoring for half an hour or so, the gear appears to engage and disengage fairly satisfactorily. This morning, however, no matter how many times I put the lever into the forward position, nothing happened.
Two years ago the clutch plate was rebuilt as the first cause of the problem offered was that the plate was slipping. Fair enough.....after a repair job the problem appeared to go away for a while. Since then the problem started again and so we have had the gear box stripped and serviced. Twice. The mechanics SWEAR there is nothing wrong with the gear box and indeed claim it is in very good condition. They demonstrated this by manually engaging the clutch lever (the one on the side of the gear box) into both forward and reverse with satisfactory clunks in both directions.
So, because the clutch plate has been repaired and because the gear box is seemingly in good order we were then told that the gear lever on the binnacle was wearing out and was not moving the morse cable far enough. A couple of sprays of WD40 later we were told that before starting the engine we spend 10 minutes moving the gear lever forwards and backwards to ensure that any salt or dirt trapped in the gear lever teeth would be freed up. This dirt, we were told, was the cause of the problem. Well, if this is the problem this isn't exactly a practical work-around. We were told we would eventually have to replace the gear lever. However we have thoroughly investigated the point at which the clutch lever engages and disengages and there is absolutely nothing wrong with the cable. The cable pulls the clutch lever arm far enough back to engage forwards gear.
I appreciate this is a problem that can't really be solved without someone taking a look at this in situ, but I would be interested to know if (a) this sounds familiar to anyone and (b) if there are any simple checks I could do to help me tick off possible causes. It's driving Liz and myself mad!
It's a Perkins Prima M60 engine and Hurth gearbox dating back to 1989.