Very nice: In my mind could not see how the clutch dog moved on the shaft during shift, but I looked in there and saw how the shift cam turned/changed when shifting forward, neutral and reverse.
The one thing I can't seem to understand how my cam follower that sits in the hole on the end of the shaft has nothing under it
there is a sideways (L to R ) slot cut into the front of the LU casting and the cam slides horizontally into that slot. It has a splined hole in it. The shift shaft goes down into the LU and through a boss then through the cam and stops in a second boss.
The book says there are three small balls--not in mine and no spring and or guide.
You have to pull the spring out from around the dog and pull the pin. then all that stuff will come out. The balls are behind or in front of, forget which....been awhile, the spring. My opinion of having the balls was a tweak on how much spring pressure was needed to make the thing work. Seems once they got it working they never upgraded the design with the right spring and left the balls out.....course if it works, don't fix it.
I wonder if I lost my spring and or guide block when I took out the cam follower from the shaft, or the spring and guide block are in clutch dog, or mine dose not have them? Note: I did not remove clutch dog from shaft.
Anyway THANKS, you expiation helped a lot after reading it and looking in the motor I can see whats going on.
Note: for others use:
1. I removed carrier nut with BF punch and BF Hammer
2 Put two 3/4 inch hard would flooring between lower unit and Prop--this leaves a 3/4 inch gap between carrier and lower unit case.
3 put nut on shaft on top of prop.
4 turned the nut and it started the carrier off easily the first 3/4 of an inch.
5 then I moved the wood out even farther on the diameter of the lower unit case and moved carrier some more turning prop nut.
6 by that time it came fight out after tapping the prop shaft back and forth.
Note: I noticed the prop shaft was bent slightly, (May have helped cause leak), My engine rebuild place has a machine to measure and bend crankshafts. Mine was quite bad, (30 thousands), he bent it back to 3 thousands end to end with his machine.
What an adventure, now to put it all back to with new prop shaft seals, my original mission.
2 seals back to back on the prop shaft. One seals oil in and the other seals water out. Sounds like you'll have her going in no time.