After the bearing goes out while driving the wheels will lock up or may fly off the car even may melt to the wheel hub. It can also cause transmission problems meaning you wonÕt be able to drive the car after the bearing go out.
No, bad front wheel bearings would not prevent a transmission from shifting. If your car has bad front wheel bearings you will notice wheel noise or wheel looseness.
Are you having trouble shifting out of park? Would it be a bad solenoid/tranny?
Shifting gears without syncros in your standard transmission would be anything but easy.
the shaft inside the tranny is broke.
Year, make and model would help us help you. 1968 Ford Mustang
Try changing your PCV valve it messes with the idle control. and shifting prob is likely in tranny and may not be related at all. try PCV valve and have your tranny serviced.
Yes, BUT the result would be no better than beforethe alignment because the play in the bad bearings would prevent an accurate alignment.
take tranny apart and replace 5th gear syncro
Yes, it's possible to prevent a bicycle from shifting. Easiest would be just not to move the shifter.
how is shifting in general from even to odd gears- if it's rough, i would say it's the band and it will require rebuild of the tranny...
When it stops working. If you have the fluid and filter serviced on an average of every 32,000 to 36,000 miles, it should last a long time. When it stops shifting properly or starts shifting roughly or not down shifting properly, then I would worry about having it replaced. Not necessarily; I purchased 1993 used and found that it was not shifting past 2nd gear. A Transmission Kit for $35.00 at an auto parts store & additional tranny fluid did the trick so I'd suggest taking it to a tranny specialist that is "referred" to you by a friend so you know you can trust them. However, I will say that with 178000 miles I'm replacing sensors like crazy!
I would first check the transmission fluid level. The car needs to be on a level surface, engine idling in park, and engine warmed up.