I'm sure you have no desire to read what I'm about to write so maybe just skip this post or talk to someone else about while I post this..... I don't think anyone is freaking out. With the low number of posts you have I'd hazard a guess that none of us know you very well. So we all are just trying to help you out with a friendly warning. You don't want that bit of help or advice and that's fine, you have the info you were after......
This is my last post on the matter.
I’m talking about how even after I’ve pointed out that while I understand the reasons for the concern, I disagree with them, and I was only looking for a yes or no answer in the first place. However, nearly everyone who has posted to this thread wants to beat me over the head with the safety bible for not wanting to deal with replacing an already broken switch on a old pickup that will only be driven by me! I’m not disabling a functioning safety device, I’m bypassing a switch that is currently in 3 pieces.
Mechanic shops? I do my own mechanical work, and what few things I don’t do (like tires), I do “customer pull in/out” on. Plus, with this being an old truck with an analog odometer, there would be no good reason any tech would need to put the key in the ignition while it was there.
I do care about safety. I really do. If the switch wasn’t already broken, I wouldn’t be messing around with it. But ALL of the plastic in this truck is sun baked and really brittle, and I know if I start dismantling the dash to get access to the switch’s mounting point, I will have to replace more than half the plastic parts in the dash as they start crumbling at my touch.
I will replace these things - and probably the switch, too, although that hidden immobilizer switch idea is a good one… - eventually, but I’m not ready for a restoration job. I just need the damn truck running and driving so I can haul some things from the hardware store or to the dump…
My point is, and has been, that since I was 15, I have owned 17 vehicles, including this truck. Of those 17, only 5 have had slushboxes, and of the 12 manuals only 3 of them have had clutch switches: a 2004 Jetta, a 2007 Suzuki, and a 78 Chevy truck… the other cars range from years 1971-2000. That’s right, my 2000 Dodge Neon did NOT have a clutch switch, nor did my 95 Jetta. Point: a large majority of vehicles with manual transmissions DID NOT COME EQUIPPED with clutch switches.