I took my main- and layshafts and stuck them in the lathe at work. I used the cone shaped fixtures in either end moved into the shafts tightly, and turned the shaft by hand, measuring run out with a 0.001 resolution dial indicator thru several revolutions to assure repeatability in magnitude and location (to prove to myself that the shaft wasn't wobbling.) The layshaft had < about 0.4 mils runout under 3rd gear. The mainshaft however, (under 2nd gear ) had 2 mils runout in the area toward the center of the shaft, and less as one moved to toward the end. Any thoughts on this data? This normal, or no good? I am no machinist, and I can go back and do this again tomorrow if this doesn't make sense. Or are there threads that already address this? I tried to search but did not find anything. One other thing, the rod that the selectors ride on was bent fairly badly, I could hardly get the selectors to slide over the whole length, so I got a new one (rod.) That is what made me put the shafts on the lathe, and the fact some one (Ludwig?) suggested a guy do that when rebuilding gearboxes just to be sure the items were ok.