I have described the issues with the transmission on this car since the day we got it in previous posts (
https://www.sl113.org/forums/index.php?topic=38463.msg281062#msg281062).
The basic issue is that while driving it would randomly engage into a transmission freakout mode where the shifting would occur very harshly and with a aggressive jolt to the car. The car was basically undriveable in this mode. We discovered that this mode was able to be reset by pulling over, turning off the engine, and turning it back on again. This would reset everything and the car would perform as usual. We figured out that this mode would get engaged any time the accelerator was depressed quickly to accelerate while in a high gear. It was essentially a kickdown mode that would allow the car to down-shift to gain acceleration, but then would get stuck in this downshifted mode and the shifting behavior would be altered at lower gears. When accelerating from stop, the car would shift late at a way higher rpm, shift hard, and jerk forward in an uncomfortable way from 1st to 2nd and from 2nd to 3rd.
After much troubleshooting, we eventually figured out with the mechanic that the solution was to disengage this Constant Speed Solenoid. See photos attached. This completely disables the accelerator-based kickdown mode and allows the car to be driven normally without fear of accidentally engaging the freakout mode. Now a kickdown is still able to be achieved by engaging the button on the floor underneath the accelerator pedal, or by manually shifting the car from 4-3. This proves useful in situations where greater acceleration is needed such as merging onto the freeway or passing someone while in high gear.
Just disconnecting one wire has made such a remarkable improvement in the driving ability of this car, we are beyond happy with its current performance. Before this it was basically undrivable due to fear that this crazy shifting mode would be engaged. On the freeway for example where you cant pull over this would be disastrous. Driving very carefully it could be avoided but you couldn't get the acceleration when needed and felt unsafe on the freeway.
Obviously we feel weird about disconnecting something that is clearly meant to be connected but are very happy with the current results. This car has no air conditioning, and the temperature in southern California is generally constant. We dont drive on overly hot or cold days.
The question is, does this solution we've found have any adverse effects on the engine we are unaware of? is this a proper solution? could it point us to a perhaps more official or accepted solution to keep this car driving how it is now.