- Staff
- #41
Reverse lights is the nsbu mounted on the shift shaft. Input speed sensor is the 2 wire sensor mounted up on the drivers side just behind the bellhousing area.
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That switch that slides over the shift shaft must be aligned correctly internally before you slide it on. Per the GM shop manual, there is a special GM jig tool that aligns the bushing with the contact and holds it in place as you slide the switch onto the shaft. After it's on and bolted in place you remove the jig. This could very well be the reason you don't have reverse lights. Also check to see if your Park/Neutral safety interlock is dead on (do you have to slightly jiggle the shifter lever on the column to get it to start in either/or/both Park and Neutral) in alignment as that is also a function of that switch. If you have problems with the Park/Neutral, then that alignment issue is almost certainly also your no Reverse lights culprit, too.
The adjustment has nothing to do with before it's put on. The alignment tool just locks the switch dead center in nuetral for installation. Put the trans in nuetral, slide it on, and bolt it down, done deal. You can do it without the alignment piece as I've done several. The problem with doing these that most make is they don't deburr the shift shaft BEFORE they begin the job. Once you remove the shift arm, take a small flat file to the end and remove any sharp edges. Otherwise those sharp 3dges will cut and gouge the plastic inner portion of the bsbu making it fit loosely onto the shift shaft. It must fit tightly for it to follow the shift shafts movement.I'm talking about the quadrant-shaped black box with the two electrical connectors on the right, attached to a metal bracket with three slotted bolt holes for adjustment, that slides over the shift selector shaft on the driver's side of the transmission. That switch must be correctly internally aligned before sliding it onto the shift selector shaft and bolted in place.