I haven’t had a Paragon transmission since a Newport 28 with an A4. But on that 
boat you had to hold the lever in reverse, there was no detent.

 

My 38 originally had an A4 and Paragon, but was converted to diesel with a 
Hurth transmission about 15 years ago. I do know, from some previous repairs, 
that the Paragon transmission used a specific shift cable because of the longer 
wire length and travel distance needed for the Paragon shift linkage. Is it 
possible that PO used an incorrect cable? Or is it the fat cable used with a 
Paragon?

 

Rick Brass

Washington, NC

 

 

 

From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of Brian Davis 
via CnC-List
Sent: Tuesday, May 03, 2016 2:33 PM
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Cc: Brian Davis <brianwdavis...@gmail.com>
Subject: Stus-List Paragon Transmission

 

Dear Members,

 

I'm new to the list, but have found a lot of beneficial reading belonging to 
the list.  I purchased a 1980 Landfall 38 SL a couple of months ago.  "Nina" 
was in dry dock at Indiantown Marina in Florida for nearly 3 years before I 
bought her.  We launched her 4 weeks ago and motored her down to North Palm 
Beach pending the availability of our slip further south.  The halyards are in 
desperate need of replacing, which is why we motored the whole way...plus the 
diesel needed a good running after so long anyhow. The fuel was 3 years old, 
but had stabilizer.  Amazingly, she fired right up and purred like a tiger the 
whole way...  She's a beautiful vessel for sure!!

 

The PO did a lot of restorations to her one of which was a complete rebuild of 
the Yanmar 30hp and Vdrive.  The Paragon transmission he replaced as well and 
he happed to find one in Michigan that was still brand new from 1980...believe 
it our not.  I'm having an issue with the Reverse gear engaging and wondering 
if it's me or the trans.  When I carefully shift her into Reverse she does seem 
to fully engage or stay in gear.  I'm getting mixed feedback and hoping that 
somebody with the same set up can clarify.  The shifter is on the wheel column 
while the throttle is on the side of the cockpit.  Should I have to 
continuously hold the shifter down in reverse to keep it engaged??  Forward 
works great and there is a positive lock or click once I engage the shifter up 
into gear.  However, once back off on the throttle, move it to neutral, then 
into reverse, and then giver her juice it doesn't seem to either slow the boat 
or move into reverse. 

 

To make matters worse, I was reading the Paragon instruction sheet that I 
received from the PO and I attempted to "adjust" it as directed.  I made about 
a 1/2  to 3/4 turn (not torqueing by any means) and it cracked.  After several 
inappropriate words to myself, I was able to contact a local trans shop and 
they said it must be removed and brought in and completely taken apart in order 
to replace the part.  I happen to have the original trans so I hope I can pull 
that piece and reuse it...otherwise they said it could take months to get a 
replacement piece.

 

After a conversation with the PO he sent me the number of the place in Michigan 
where he bought it.  I spoke with them and sent the pics....waiting to hear 
back from them on advice.  In the meantime I wanted to reach out to my fellow 
C&C owners for advice.  I'm very handy and am considering pulling the trans and 
replacing it myself.  Suggestions are welcome!  But, I'm still curious as to 
why the reverse wasn't engaging....  thoughts?

 

Kind regards,

Brian Davis

..dead in the water, but at least at a marina in sunny FL..

 


 
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