If you look under your car on the left side of the trans. you will find a drain plug, above that is a shelf about 1inch deep. If you follow your hand down the shelf to the front of the trans you will touch your nuetral start switch. It has a pin on it for a wire. Behind it is your kickdown band adjustment screw. yours must be bad. It looks real easy to get to in the manuel??? RC --- Hugh & Therese <hugtrees@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > Philippe, > > I am delighted you have found the source of your > transmission problems. The > cable attachment is very delicate and the smallest > movement can make a huge > difference. As you know, I suspected it was the > cable attachment. > > However, I am still more than a little confused by > your statements that the > 57/58s have a neutral safety switch. I'm afraid > your previous email on the > topic went completely over my head. You say the > cars have two such > switches. I still think, if you will pardon my > ignorance, that they do not > have any. Mine certainly does not. Just today, I > started mine in drive, > with my foot on the brake. Because the car, mine at > least, has no such > safety switch, it is always prudent to start it with > one's foot on the > brake. The car has been known to be in gear even > with the neutral switch > pressed in, due to poor positioning of the gear > selector cable. > > With no 'P' (parking) position, the lack of a > neutral safety switch is all > the more dangerous. > > I understand the element of preventing the starter > motor from being engaged > if the engine is already running. I would not call > this a neutral safety > switch in the sense which most people understand the > term. It is simply a > mechanism to avoid the starter being energized again > once the engine is > already running. The other switch you described, if > I understand correctly, > is simply the device that activates the starter when > the neutral button is > completely pushed for the purpose of starting the > car. In your case, the > starter was engaged when you fully pressed in the > neutral switch. Because > the cable was no longer attached and your engine was > locked in reverse, you > were able to start the car in reverse. The starter > button, which is the > neutral button, did its job as designed. Excuse my > lack of perception, but > I see nothing in the two systems you describe as > neutral safety switches > that would prevent the car from starting even though > the transmission was > locked in reverse. > > This gets me back to my own experiences with poor > adjustments on the gear > selector cable and the need to have your foot on the > brake just in case. My > car fits in my garage only if the front fender > touches the garage wall at > the front. Not a good time to have a Hemi sized > power surge! > > This may come across as counting angels on the head > of a pin. Neither of > the two devices you mentioned would have prevented > the car from starting in > reverse in your circumstances and it is very > doubtful if either were > circumvented at all because both are needed to start > the car. The design is > simply not very good because it actually allows the > engine to be started in > circumstances such as yours, and mine. > > Hugh > > > >