Question about the '87 K75S that I inherited last month. It's only got 17K on it but while riding it home from ND to OR I noticed the downshift from 4-3 and occasionally 3-2 was pretty sticky unless I carried some RPM as I downshifted. I looked it up here when I got home and read that it could be a symptom of the transmission input splines needing lube. So, this weekend I pulled it all apart, cleaned things up, lubed the splines with Guard Dog, put it back together and, SHAZZAM!, it downshifts just as sweet as can be now. Love it!
But the mechanic in me is questioning why lack of lube on the input spline affects the downshift. I don't understand the mechanics of this phenomenon...Anybody got an answer that a halfwit like me might understand?
BTW...I went into this job assuming I wouldn't need a clutch alignment tool as I planned to leave the clutch alone. When I went to reinstall the transmission, it wouldn't line up...looked from behind and the friction plate was obviously off center. I have no idea how it moved as I was very careful pulling the transmission straight back and I can't imagine it moving anyway... :dunno2:...even used guide pins I made from long bolts. Loosened the clutch bolts enough so the friction plate would move then finger tightened them and used the transmission itself as an alignment tool. Took a couple tries but it slid in eventually. Once it did, I carefully pulled the transmission back and torqued the clutch bolts and slid the transmission back forward. Other than that unexpected issue, the job was pretty straight forward. Spent more time cleaning parts that actually wrenching. This was my first experience working on a BMW...I am very impressed with how this machine was designed.