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View Full Version : Stock shift boot modification, to use with aftermarket knobs



tom3
04-13-2004, 09:52 PM
First I'd like to give credit to raiyo for the idea he posted in this thread (http://www.ephatch.com/forum/showthread.php?s=&threadid=26683).

Then I also got another idea from another forum member whose name escapes me now. He showed us how to flip the top fixture on the stock boot so that the chrome plastic part is on the inside, and the inside black clip is on the outside. Basically you detach the chrome part by squeezing two tabs inside it, then you put the two back together, except with the chrome piece on the inside.

The top of the boot would look like this:
http://www.rit.edu/~tyc0429/car/shifter/boot1.JPG

And an inside view of the top of the boot:
http://www.rit.edu/~tyc0429/car/shifter/boot2.JPG
You can kind of see the chrome part, with a rubber washer stuffed in there (as per raiyo's idea).

But it turned out that the lone rubber washer was not enough to hold the boot up in my case. Overtime, the top of the boot would always slide down. Sometimes the rubber washer would pop out of the chrome piece too, which is annoying because all this occurs under the boot, sometimes requiring me to remove the cover and do it all over again.

So I came up with a solution that would rid this problem once and for all. What I did was I got 2 more rubber washers (to fix unto the shifter shaft tightly), and 2 nylon spacers (to increase the height), and stacked them together on the shifter shaft to hold the top of the boot up (I had measured the necessary height). I soon found that by themselves, each individual piece was prone to sliding down the shaft past the first bend, which defeats the purpose of having them there in the first place.

I then superglued the washers and spacers together to form one tall "boot spacer", it looks like this:
http://www.rit.edu/~tyc0429/car/shifter/spacers.JPG

The boot spacer now goes on the shifter shaft and stays above the first bend:
http://www.rit.edu/~tyc0429/car/shifter/spacersOn.JPG

Then I just put everything back together, and now the boot stays up, and it doesn't slide down one bit even when I apply some force on it.

The end result:
http://www.rit.edu/~tyc0429/car/shifter/done1.JPG
http://www.rit.edu/~tyc0429/car/shifter/done2.JPG
http://www.rit.edu/~tyc0429/car/shifter/done3.JPG

Total cost of modification was about 2 dollars for the 3 rubber washers (including the one stuffed in the chrome part) and 2 nylon spacers. What I love the most about this approach is that it's completely reversible. So I can, if I need to, return everything back to stock.

BTW I have a titanium color knob now instead of the bright chrome one. :D

Ep3 No.2
04-13-2004, 10:09 PM
hey that doesnt look too bad.

BarracksSi
05-08-2004, 05:47 PM
Originally posted by tom3
Then I also got another idea from another forum member whose name escapes me now. He showed us how to flip the top fixture on the stock boot so that the chrome plastic part is on the inside, and the inside black clip is on the outside.

That might have been me, but then again, I didn't do it quite like that. I had the same black plastic piece on the outside, but ended up using superglue to attach it, plus sandwiching the rubber washer on the inside for better structure.

Problem with my method was that I can't go back to stock without buying a whole new Si shift boot. Oh well, I think my CTR boot fits best anyway (thanks, raiyo), although it's certainly more expensive.

Siborg18
05-02-2008, 07:31 PM
I could have just bought a jdm oem replacement for the shift boot for a new shift knob so that my boot would not sag for $43.00 from a wholesaler. Instead I went to Ace hardware and bought two rubber spacers (in the plumbing department) to hold the height of the boot to a presentable level. It worked... the Chrome ring is still there, but it looks very presentable for installing any kind of shift knobs. :meek:

RedSiBaron
05-02-2008, 07:49 PM
i got my jdm knob and boot off a member for 30 bucks shipped :mbiggrin:


...thought id share:mangel:

BarracksSi
05-02-2008, 07:56 PM
I'm guessing that the optional RSX aluminum knob still comes with the collar that converts the boot from the original snap-on ring to a clean non-snap top.

It's the knob I'm using now, but I still have the JDM boot.

Check here:
http://www.handaaccessories.com/rsx.html

Installation instructions:
http://www.handaaccessories.com/rsx/08U92.pdf

wh03lse
05-13-2008, 12:29 PM
is there any update links for pics
i was actually lookin into just switching my stock ep3 knob and get a skunk2 knob or something...shouldnt it just be a simple twist off and replace with a new knob?

RedSiBaron
05-13-2008, 01:29 PM
is there any update links for pics
i was actually lookin into just switching my stock ep3 knob and get a skunk2 knob or something...shouldnt it just be a simple twist off and replace with a new knob?

yah but it will look like asshole...

the description still makes sense though...

or just buy the jdm shiftboot for 30 shipped thats in the classifieds right now

http://www.ephatch.com/forum/showthread.php?t=45735

or just buy washers that dont go past the increase in diameter point on the shifter arm, that should work to keep the boot up after you flip the pieces around that he describes......just take the thing off and look at it, you can figure it out...or drive to the home depot parking lot, take the cover off look at it, walk in, goto the hardware section and figure it out...im not trying to be mean or nothin :mbiggrin: just saying it would be pretty easy to do with a little creativity I HAVE FAITH IN YOU!!!! haha

wh03lse
05-13-2008, 06:47 PM
haha thanks ^ i swear its made like its life and death taking it apart and putting it back on kinna scares me lol

RedSiBaron
05-13-2008, 07:06 PM
haha thanks ^ i swear its made like its life and death taking it apart and putting it back on kinna scares me lol

haha nah, i can pop off the shield connected to the boot in a couple seconds and back on just as fast...its all very easy