I want to change my shift knob out for this...
http://raceconsultingagency.com/i-15...jDYxoCdePw_wcB
Anyone know how?thanks
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I want to change my shift knob out for this...
http://raceconsultingagency.com/i-15...jDYxoCdePw_wcB
Anyone know how?thanks
The trigger on the automatic shift knob presses down a shaft inside the shifter "stick" that unlocks it and allows it to move. The one you linked won't have that.
If you want to fit it onto the car, it *might* be possible if you get a sleeve to fit it onto the shaft but let it slide. You'd need to press the shift knob straight down to shift (instead of pressing the thumb button on the stock one). The tough part would be restraining the knob so it doesn't lift off the shaft...
If you want to see what I'm talking about, you can remove the stock shifter fairly easily. On the front side, near the bottom of the handle are two screws. Remove those, and it should pull off. You'll see the plastic piece that you have to push down to shift.
Are there any plug and play options?knowing me,I'd try to do some modifications and fuck something up
Take heart! It's pretty easy to go back to stock if you mess up a shifter modification:
https://www.thegalantcenter.org/show...-back-to-stock
I modified mine to do an Acura MDX shift knob. Let me see if I still have it lying around. I did a manual swap, so you can have it cheap if you want. You'll need a shift boot to make it look good.
If you search for automatic shift knobs, most have a trigger instead of the thumb button on ours. Here's how the stock one works (view from back):
http://i.imgur.com/T7beDn6.png
And here's how most trigger auto shifters work:
http://i.imgur.com/8zIemyC.png
The main thing is that you'll need to trim the top of the white plastic stick inside the shaft so that the trigger/button mechanism in an aftermarket knob will still push it down. Usually, it's just cutting for clearance. If you're worried, I'd head to a "pull-it-yourself" junkyard and remove a stock shifter to see how it works and get a spare white plastic stick for insurance.
Found a knob similar to the one you posted. It's made for automatic shifters; you push it down to shift.
http://www.motor-rhythm.com/shift-kn...-shift-at.html
"Mechanical Witchcraft" XD I get what you're saying tho, thats smart.
It just means I was too lazy to diagram what happens inside. The angle you cut will depend on the auto shifter you want to put in.
Mine had a mechanism inside so that when you pulled the trigger, it should press straight down on the shaft from the top. So I cut mine flat. Our stock shifters push sideways on the angled surface to make the stick go down, so they have that ~45 degree angle on them.
Do you have an aftermarket shifter already?
No not yet I was holding off
Until I understood what to do to make it work but I think I'll buy one soon and make it work
That's your best bet. Whatever you buy *should* be adaptable, but you'll need something in hand to figure out exactly how to make it work :-)