The springs turned up and I apprehensively pulled the top cover off the transmission.
Blow me down, it was much simpler then I expected. Three bolts and the top control valve came off.
Three more bolts, then a religious hymn when I found I had to take off the outside oil feed into the transmission, to pull out the inside pipe that feeds the control valve with oil, then the lower control valve came off.
Put in the new springs and all new o-rings. the new springs were a tad longer then the old ones, especially the little check valve spring.
All back together with properly adjusted direction/speed spools (the directional spool was out of adjustment by probably a mm or two) and a test run revealed my problem of the directional clutches not properly engaging at rare times had manifested to not engaging properly, all the time.
Pulled the pressure control valve off, found I had put one spool in backwards. Back in and a few hours test run later revealed that gear changes are snappier. Reverse no longer has a long lag to engage, and I could not get it to play up.
I should borrow this pressure gauge to check the pressures though and adjust the shims as necessary.
But all in all I think it was money well spent. Was quite clean in there and lots of centre pop ID marks from whoever rebuilt it.
