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Mark,
When I went outside this morning and started my car it almost didn't start. I turned over the engine a couple of times and was followed by a loud crunch. I turned the key over again and chu chu vroom. Obviously, it did not like the cold weather! This is not the first time I have heard that crunch sound while trying to start the engine. I hate that noise first thing in the morning.
In any event, now that the car was running I tried to get it into reverse and it would not engage. I had to roll the car forward a little in order to get it into reverse. I could hear every move of the shifter as it was trying to engage the right spot. Once I got the car on the road it took a while for the shifter to stop being so "stiff". I have also found that my shifter can be difficult to shift after it has been sitting a while.
My first thought was - "Hey, these cars are from Germany where it gets really cold, what gives?"
I think these cars are just very sensitive to climate changes and the such. My old 944 was the same way. Just my 2 cents! <img src="/forum/images/smilies/968/biggrin.gif" class="smilie" alt="" />
94 968 coupe, grand prix white exterior, black interior
(This post was last modified: 11-29-2005, 03:49 AM by
flwbyu.)
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To refill the transaxle I glued 5' of rubber hose to the end of a funnel which she held behind the car and poured while I held the end in the transaxle.
The transaxle needs to be warm when you drain it. I drove to the hardware store to buy the hose and funnel then once I was home I got the car up on four jackstands as quickly as I could safely do. Then removed the fill plug (10mm allen) and placed a oil catch pan under the drain plug before removing it. The oil coming out will both be warm (perhaps hot) and some of the worst smelling stuff you have ever smelled.
While the fluid was draining I prepared the hose + funnel and adjusted the jack stands until I was comfortable that the car was level for refilling.
When you are completed torque the drain and fill plugs to 26 foot pounds. The manual incorrectly states 22 foot pounds on the page Dave has provided. On another page it states 26 foot pounds and 35nm = 25.8146752 foot pounds.
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If I did not say so before, open the fill plug before you open the drain plug to make sure that you can not get stuck with an empty transaxle.
This is the fill plug on the drivers side of the transaxle.
And this is the drain plug from below.
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Guess I've just gotten used to driving Porsches with much more than 100k miles on them...
I just double-clutch when it's really cold (20 degrees F here today). Given about 5 minutes of that, car shifts just fine. I'm running Mobil1 gear oil and am sure my 2nd and 3rd gear synchros wouldn't mind being refreshed <img src="/forum/images/smilies/968/smile.gif" class="smilie" alt="" />
Dave S., '92 968 Midnight Blue 145k+ miles
F-Stock Racer and Faithful Daily Driver
Car#662 at Chicago Region DE's & Club Races
HWFM Chief Marriage Counselor
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Did you replace the clutch master and slave when the clutch was done? If so how was the master adjusted? My car had the clutch master incorrectly adjusted and poorly bled. This caused a condition similar to yours but only for second gear.
Check the free play and rebleed the clutch system.
The only other part known to fail is the clutch fork. Was yours replaced during the clutch job?
Joel Wahlsten
93 968 Amazon Green w/LSD and a few mods
2017 Cayenne GTS Mahogany Metallic