Exige S2 Gearbox
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Discussion

F.C.

Original Poster:

3,898 posts

224 months

Wednesday 3rd December 2008
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Does anyone here find 2nd to 3rd upshift a bit "crashy"?
Try as I may unless I'm travelling at pedestrian speed I don't seem to get a "clean" change I'm thinking syncro problem but the car has only done 2500 miles and the problem is minor at present, I'm just fishing to find out if there is a history of this happening.
All other shifts snick in an any RPM just 2nd to 3rd causing me to wonder especially at higher RPM.
F.C.

MrP80

312 posts

216 months

Wednesday 3rd December 2008
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If you are on SELOC, have a look at this thread:

http://forums.seloc.org/viewthread.php?tid=153765&... others have complianed of similar problems.

Some have had rebuilds on the box, others have mentioned that their was a dodgy batch of selector cables.

No problems with mine other than it's a little stiff when it's cold

denisb

509 posts

271 months

Wednesday 3rd December 2008
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Mine has a lovely shift between all gears (12,000 miles old and now probably put a curse on it!).

NathanE

539 posts

218 months

Wednesday 3rd December 2008
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Big thread on SELOC Technical forum about it a few months ago.

A lot of cars have it. I don't think its a synchro issue because the "crunchy" type sound and feeling comes from the lever itself. Whereas if it was at the gearbox end (behind) you'd definately know about it.

Mine is like this:

1st - hard to get unless stopped or crawling very slowly
2nd - hard to get when car is cold in the morning but after that it is generally fine
3rd - never hard to get as such but almost always seems to be a unpleasant feeling when shifting into it. can reduce the bad feeling by shifting into it very slowly and positively
4th - not noticed any significant problem
5th - sometimes can have a bad feeling about it like 3rd but no where near as bad
6th - not noticed any significant problem. sometimes it is actually TOO easy to get into and makes it feel like a toy.
Reverse - PITA to get in the morning. generally about a 70% success rate. helps to cycle round the box first to "wake the cables up" and then go try for reverse.


Edited by NathanE on Wednesday 3rd December 14:33

aelord

337 posts

241 months

Wednesday 3rd December 2008
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I had third to second downshift problems - gearbox rebuilt under waranty no quibbles.

cyberface

12,214 posts

273 months

Wednesday 3rd December 2008
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Cable shifts with mid engined cars can often be a bit dodgy, and never as 'snicky' as a mechanical connection or, even better, a direct lever into the box itself.

My S2 Exige gearbox feels OK so far - not as positive as the VXT's box (I did shorten the gear stick on that car, which may have contributed to the quality of the change), but much more accurate than the S1 Elise and infinitely better than the Noble's (which was abysmal). Many issues can be resolved by adjustment of the cables.

I've only had the Exige for a week so still getting used to the 'box (still thinking I'm in my old VXT and getting sixth when going for reverse, doh) but other than the expected imperfect shift, due to cable operation to an engine behind me, certainly nothing I'd describe as 'broken', 'faulty' or in need of warranty rebuild...

My car's only done 5000 miles and I'm doing a 400 mile trip on Saturday so will give the gearbox good exercise and report back...

cyberface

12,214 posts

273 months

Sunday 7th December 2008
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Just done nearly 400 miles over the weekend and no, the gearbox is sweet as a nut. So yours must need the cables adjusting...

shangani

3,069 posts

253 months

Monday 8th December 2008
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Maybe I've been lucky, but all the yota engined cars I have driven have had a very good gearchange. There must be something wrong with the OP's gearbox or the linkage needs adjusting. Surely something that lotus should be looking at as a warranty issue.

bordseye

2,142 posts

208 months

Monday 8th December 2008
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It might not affect every yota engined car but it certainly isnt uncommon. Mine does it when cold, but as the oil in the box warms up it gets imperceptible. Odd thing is, though, that there is no crunch going from 4th to 3rd just from 2nd to 3rd. Which is what makes me think it isnt synchro - if it were, then the matching required of the synchro is significantly more from 4th to 3rd and there should be a far worse crunch.

Having said that it does feel like gear crunch and having been brought up on gearboxes with no synchro or only on top 3 gears - its something I know the feel of.

I reckon its a linkage issue. But its certainly nothing much to worry about.

b14

1,211 posts

204 months

Monday 8th December 2008
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My Exige S2 shift is perfect - 10,500 miles, 56 plate. Certainly no "expected imperfect shift, due to cable operation to an engine behind me" - the cables work excellently and are extremely precise. I had a slight problem finding 3rd for about the first 500 miles of driving, now I get every gear, every time. 1st can be a little bit difficult when cold but after a mile or so, no problems.

Some cars had the bad box but the Exige S2 shift is inherently excellent.

21TonyK

12,453 posts

225 months

Monday 8th December 2008
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Interesting thread, 2-3 on mine is a pig. If you are gentle and ease it in it's fine, a full-chat change 9/10 you end up in 4th.

Will add linkage adjustment to my winter job list.

Alexbturbo

8,338 posts

229 months

Monday 8th December 2008
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So far gearchanges 1 to 6 have been ok in my Exige S although i do occasionally get the tricky to engage reverse gear issue when the car is cold

cyberface

12,214 posts

273 months

Monday 8th December 2008
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[redacted]

shangani

3,069 posts

253 months

Monday 8th December 2008
quotequote all
cyberface said:
better than the S1 and early S2 K-series engined Elises IME.
That's not hard. biggrin

In standard form with the standard linkage, the PG1 shift is a bit like stirring porridge. A lot better with the uprated linkage though. Still nowhere near as good as the yota shift can be.

cyberface

12,214 posts

273 months

Monday 8th December 2008
quotequote all
shangani said:
cyberface said:
better than the S1 and early S2 K-series engined Elises IME.
That's not hard. biggrin

In standard form with the standard linkage, the PG1 shift is a bit like stirring porridge. A lot better with the uprated linkage though. Still nowhere near as good as the yota shift can be.
At least it was stirring porridge of a reasonable viscosity... the Noble shift was heavy, vague and I swear the gate moved around on each shift. Like stirring lumpy concrete but with no feedback. There was a reason that car had two fat turbos on a nice V6, leave it in one gear and go! hehe

Which always confused me about the sprint Elises, the VHPDs and sport 160s - high revving fast-twitch bds of engines which thrive on keeping on cam... with the PG1 box? I haven't driven a Sport 190, surely the gearbox would be a right weak point in an otherwise razor-sharp set of controls, no?? confused

So far through my limited experience of sports cars, the Exige S2 wins the mid-engined shift quality award smile What would interest me is how the mk3 MR2 feels... same gearbox, Toyota engineered linkage. It's even stupendously light for a modern mainstream 'sports' car, isn't it under 1000kg? Obviously nowhere near Lotus light but Lotus define themselves by lightness and to hell with the compromises. Just funny that in a world of 1300 kg supermini hatchbacks and MX-5s, Toyota (who already provide engines for the definitive lightweight 'midengined runabout' itself, the Elise) build the third generation of their MR2 smaller and ultra-light weight (compared to the mk2, which was bigger and heavier).... ooops swerving off topic, it's been a very stressful day....

F.C.

Original Poster:

3,898 posts

224 months

Monday 8th December 2008
quotequote all
cyberface said:
shangani said:
cyberface said:
better than the S1 and early S2 K-series engined Elises IME.
In standard form with the standard linkage, the PG1 shift is a bit like stirring porridge. A lot better with the uprated linkage though. Still nowhere near as good as the yota shift can be.
At least it was stirring porridge of a reasonable viscosity... the Noble shift was heavy, vague and I swear the gate moved around on each shift. Like stirring lumpy concrete but with no feedback. There was a reason that car had two fat turbos on a nice V6, leave it in one gear and go! hehe
You should have fitted an M400 linkage, the 3R linkage was the original reason I didn't buy a Noble,
They sorted it on the M400

cyberface

12,214 posts

273 months

Monday 8th December 2008
quotequote all
F.C. said:
cyberface said:
shangani said:
cyberface said:
better than the S1 and early S2 K-series engined Elises IME.
In standard form with the standard linkage, the PG1 shift is a bit like stirring porridge. A lot better with the uprated linkage though. Still nowhere near as good as the yota shift can be.
At least it was stirring porridge of a reasonable viscosity... the Noble shift was heavy, vague and I swear the gate moved around on each shift. Like stirring lumpy concrete but with no feedback. There was a reason that car had two fat turbos on a nice V6, leave it in one gear and go! hehe
You should have fitted an M400 linkage, the 3R linkage was the original reason I didn't buy a Noble,
They sorted it on the M400
The M400 was meant to be good and quite a bit faster, wasn't it... given I got banned for speeding in my lowly early car it's probably good I ended up much preferring the agility and smaller size of the VXT and now the Exige smile The Noble was a bit too wide to really hoon around B roads - there was no margin for little slides here and there, or dodging potholes, cyclists, etc. hehe

F.C.

Original Poster:

3,898 posts

224 months

Tuesday 9th December 2008
quotequote all
cyberface said:
F.C. said:
cyberface said:
shangani said:
cyberface said:
better than the S1 and early S2 K-series engined Elises IME.
In standard form with the standard linkage, the PG1 shift is a bit like stirring porridge. A lot better with the uprated linkage though. Still nowhere near as good as the yota shift can be.
At least it was stirring porridge of a reasonable viscosity... the Noble shift was heavy, vague and I swear the gate moved around on each shift. Like stirring lumpy concrete but with no feedback. There was a reason that car had two fat turbos on a nice V6, leave it in one gear and go! hehe
You should have fitted an M400 linkage, the 3R linkage was the original reason I didn't buy a Noble,
They sorted it on the M400
The M400 was meant to be good and quite a bit faster, wasn't it... given I got banned for speeding in my lowly early car it's probably good I ended up much preferring the agility and smaller size of the VXT and now the Exige smile The Noble was a bit too wide to really hoon around B roads - there was no margin for little slides here and there, or dodging potholes, cyclists, etc. hehe
Haha, while I agree with the agility comments the Lotus actually has a wider rear track than the Noble (0.3")and overall width with / without mirrors there is about a 2" difference, I think it's the extra 100 odd kilos that is key here.
The Noble was a bit of a handful compared to the Exige and was far easier to "get into trouble" with I found myself facing the wrong direction on a couple of occasions eek

cyberface

12,214 posts

273 months

Tuesday 9th December 2008
quotequote all
Now that does surprise me - the Noble always felt a much bigger car all round... front end wasn't as planted as any of the Lotus varieties but I never found it a handful. If anything the extra torque made it easier to do small slides, though momentum oversteer was a nightmare, you had to be ridiculously quick to catch it wobble

TTwiggy

11,793 posts

220 months

Tuesday 9th December 2008
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On the Toyota 'S' we only get five gears (plus reverse!) and I have to say that it's one of the sweetest boxes I've ever used.