1990 Chaparral with a Bravo 1 hooked up to 7.4L Mercruiser. Last summer, the shifter was getting sticky going in/out of gear. I'm getting a late start this season, but wanted to find/fix that. So, in my effort to begin troubleshooting, I had shifted it, without the engine running, probably 10-12 times. Now I'm seeing numerous posts/web pages stating that shifting Bravo drives with the engine off should not be done. Great. Now what have I done? Apparently I misinterpreted the warning in my Mercruiser Operation & Maintenance manual which states: "Never shift into or out of gear unless throttle lever is at idle RPM." (I assumed it meant "if the engine is running")
I did not see, and subsequently could not find any other warnings to that effect in either my Clymer Stern Drive shop manual #B742, my Mercruiser Installation Manual for Bravo Models, or the Series 3000 Remote control (the shifter) Installation and Operation Instructions, all of which I had reviewed prior to doing anything.
The stickiness problem appears to possibly be related to the lower shift cable having been "ground down" by contact with the flywheel...so now the inner metal wires on the cable are exposed...I'm guessing this was the result of poor cable routing by the mechanic I had put in the new shifter a few years ago (when I got the boat back, and went to launch, put the boat in reverse, and it went forward...a close call with the guy in front of me - the shop had installed the cables incorrectly).
So now that I operated the shifter w/o the engine running, what should I do?
Thank you in advance for your help and comments.
-Chris
I did not see, and subsequently could not find any other warnings to that effect in either my Clymer Stern Drive shop manual #B742, my Mercruiser Installation Manual for Bravo Models, or the Series 3000 Remote control (the shifter) Installation and Operation Instructions, all of which I had reviewed prior to doing anything.
The stickiness problem appears to possibly be related to the lower shift cable having been "ground down" by contact with the flywheel...so now the inner metal wires on the cable are exposed...I'm guessing this was the result of poor cable routing by the mechanic I had put in the new shifter a few years ago (when I got the boat back, and went to launch, put the boat in reverse, and it went forward...a close call with the guy in front of me - the shop had installed the cables incorrectly).
So now that I operated the shifter w/o the engine running, what should I do?
Thank you in advance for your help and comments.
-Chris