Ok, so I didn't remove the shifter assembly, but I did snap a few pics with it still mounted in the car. I will say mine is not as pretty as yours Whoodoo, but I am justifying it by saying nobody will see it rather than saying I'm lazy. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/wink.gif
This is the upper-most set of bushings. I made the bushing on the right with a thicker flange to keep the shifter closer to the driver. On the left is a concave flat washer (curving away from the brass bushing) followed by a thick lock washer and a 14mm nut. I managed to get the clearance just right so that when the nut is fully tightened, it takes up all the space, but doesn't put the shifter in a bind.
This is the the lower set of bushings that are plastic that I left in place. Instead of machining some brass bushings, I bought a bolt and turned it down. The hole in the steel that the bolt passes through was just a few thousandths bigger than the plastic bushings, so I turned the bolt down so it fit tightly in the steel and forced it through the bushings. Since I turned the threads off the end of the bolt, I used an 8 x 1.25 (IIRC) die and threaded the end of the bolt to accept the same nut as the original bolt.
This is the end of the bolt I machined. You can see there is an aluminum spacer (I machined that a few years ago) for the spring and big flat washer. Those take the place of another plastic bushing that allows the spring to function properly. I used two nuts to set the end play on the bolt and, consequently, the friction of the bushings.
This is the bushing for the pivot point of the L-shaped arm that had disintegrated and was causing the most trouble. I originally machined it so the flange was at the bottom, but I realized I would get better action (that's what she said!) if the L-shaped arm was as low as possible. So I flipped the bushing over so the flange is at the top under the flat washer and snap ring. This put the L-shaped arm in contact with the shifter base, so I made sure I used plenty of grease to reduce the friction. You can't quite see the flange under the steel flat washer in this photo.
This is admittedly a crappy photo, but it is of the ball and socket-type joint at the very bottom of the shifter (with plenty of grease). This is where the shift lever acts on the L-shaped arm. There is a plastic piece from the factory that goes in there that I replaced with a brass piece. I machined this a few years ago too. I realize a photo would be very helpful here, but it would mean removing the shifter from the car (Ok, I
am lazy!). It basically looks like the factory piece, but is brass. And greasy.
And that's about it. Hopefully interesting to someone. I think it took me longer to write this than to do all the machining. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grin.gif