Take that same line of questioning and apply it to the 5spd Avengers.
Now i've driven several manuals and even my dad's 1983 Chevette shifted smoother. When i drove my moms 96 Sentra, the shifter was moving a spoon through some hot oatmeal as far as the resistance goes. Same goes for the 93 Hyundai Excel I once had [hatchback gokart
]. Now I expect to feel a slight resistance when I'm shifting gears because thats the safety of the design. It lets you know you're about to go into a gear [or out of]. However, I expect it to be a smooth motion.
Back to the door hinge analogy: You have the smooth shutting doors that give the right amount of resistance to move past that bump [Sentra, Chevette, Excel], and then you have the doors that might have been damaged somehow and they pop when you move past that point and require more force [Avenger].
What would cause the shifter to give this extra resistance? It's like when your pressing a coin down onto another coin at the edge and make the bottom coin flip. You feel when it snaps and the top coin hits the table? I guess thats a better analogy.
Any ideas guys?
97 ES





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