Well I had to fix another shifter that fell thru the floor on a festy this afternoon, so I figured I'd take a few pics and do a quick writeup of how I've found is the best way to do it.
You will need a bolt that is long enough to reach thru the entire shifter assembly (about an inch and a half... sorry, I didn't measure it), and a drill with appropriate bits.
The idea is to drill a hole through both the upper and lower plates (the part that bolts to the floor and the stabilizer) and then use the bolt to hold them in place. In order to still allow the flexibility of the rubber you cannot crank down on the nut, which is why you need two of them to act as a lock nut.
Pictures are worth a million words, so...
The hole, you may need to beat down the lip on the floor a little to allow the bolt head to fit.
With the bolt I used:
From the bottom side. Note the two nuts.
And with the shifter installed.
You don't need to remove the shifter in order to do this, I was installing a short shifter at the same time which is why that one was removed.
Nate
You will need a bolt that is long enough to reach thru the entire shifter assembly (about an inch and a half... sorry, I didn't measure it), and a drill with appropriate bits.
The idea is to drill a hole through both the upper and lower plates (the part that bolts to the floor and the stabilizer) and then use the bolt to hold them in place. In order to still allow the flexibility of the rubber you cannot crank down on the nut, which is why you need two of them to act as a lock nut.
Pictures are worth a million words, so...
The hole, you may need to beat down the lip on the floor a little to allow the bolt head to fit.
With the bolt I used:
From the bottom side. Note the two nuts.
And with the shifter installed.
You don't need to remove the shifter in order to do this, I was installing a short shifter at the same time which is why that one was removed.
Nate
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