Yeah verily, a lock to get into N could cause
'concern' in some tight full throttle
situations. (remembering back to those IAC
incidents in Audis... did those cars have a
lock-out on neutral?)
The Powerglide's PNDLR was a money saving 'mod'
to the standard (at the time) Hydramatic NDLR.
It saved some valve logic in the transmission.
The Hydramatic parking pawl was engaged by
pulling the selector into 'R' after the engine
was stopped.
Early Hydramatics had no locking detents. The
selector could be moved to any position,
anytime. The parking pawl would not engage
unless the pressure on both the front and rear
pumps was zero. 'Low' wouldn't engage above 40 mph.
--
pj
Tom In Missouri wrote:
> Yes, I think all automatics you can bump from drive into neutral. I
think
> it is a safety feature so that you can always kick it out of gear if
need
> be. You can't bump reverse into park, though. That causes damage to
the
> transmission. Joe M was good until he got to the R to Park. lol
That
> causes lots of grinding and noise and if you do it at a fast enough
speed
> and enough force on the lever, you discover you no longer have park.
Don't
> try it at home, it is an expensive lesson. lol
>
> Some very old Powerglides went PNDLR instead of what we consider normal
with
> PRNDL or PRNDLL today. I don't think there was a detent between R and L
or
> maybe not enough to prevent accidental changes. I believe the old '50s
GM
> Hydramatic transmission was also set as PNDLLR and maybe some Ford
> automatics. The '50s had a lot of pushbutton automatics for Chrysler,
so
> I don't know if Chrysler had any sticks with PNDLR or not.
>
>
>
>
> <BSAKing@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
>
news:f1c2084d-53bf-4e09-bac3-f2e487fae4cc@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On Apr 21, 9:02 am, "CardsFan" <m...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>> "Joe M" <txj...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote in message
>>
>> news:V9fOj.4331$vF.2462@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>
>>>> I notice that when I put the ole slug into gear that the position
>>>> between drive and neutral does not lock in. In other words, I can
push
>>>> the shifter into neutral without pushing the shifter button. All the
>>>> others lock in.
>>> You may push the lock button out of habit before moving the shift
lever,
>>> but...
>>> I believe you will find that is correct function for most cars with
auto
>>> trans.
>>> The lever will move between neutral and drive without pushing the lock
>>> button.
>>> The lever is held in either position by a spring detent.
>>> IIRC, you don't need to press the lock button to move from 1 to 2, 2
to
>>> D,
>>> D to N, N to D, R to N, or R to Park.
>> No automatic I ever knew had a shift detent going from Drive to
Neutral.
>> But there is a detent going from Reverse to Park.
>>
>> AJM
>> '93 Ruby coupe, 6 sp (both tops)
>
> Hmmm - so you mean you can be driving along the highway and just bump
> it into neutral? Funny thing - I guess it is old age - I have had this
> car for years and really do not remember if it was originally like
> this.... duh... I was assuming something had given out on it.
>
>


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