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Trans removal
Yes, there are sleeves on each axle and all you end up with is a small splined shaft on each side. When you split the case, remove all the bolts, turn it around with the input shaft facing you and push the input shaft and that side of the case out and the whole thing will stay together. Your side of the case has nothing in it but the one brake system. Once you get the case apart remove the input shaft, chain and sprocket as one unit and you are good to go. There is a spacer washer behind the large bearing on the input shaft, it usually stays in the case when you pull the input shaft out. No need to get into the brakes. Your problem is on that input shaft somewhere, or the tang that rides in the shift collar broke off the shift lever.
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Trans removal
There are clips on the axles, but they are just locators and don't have to come off. The dogs you talk about aren't there. The way it shifts is there is a tang or pawl on the L at the bottom of the shift arm and it rides in the shift collar. The collar has three positions and is held in position by a spring and two balls that push into grooves on the inside of the shift collar. What happens is either the tang breaks off and ends up just riding in it's hole in the shift arm or the gears on the shift collar and/or the forward gear get smashed and won't mesh cleanly. The reason it doesn't stay in gear is the shift collar doesn't make it far enough into gear to let the spring mounted balls seat in the grooves on the back side of the shift collar. Make sure when you slide that shift collar off you have your hand wrapped around the input shaft, because when the collar clears the spring loaded balls they will fly. Oh yeah, you better take some lubrication with you to the Deere store when you go to buy parts. That forward gear is almost 200.00, if you need it. Actually I may have some parts here, depending on what you find.
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Trans removal
Those rounded edges hang the collar up as it slides up the shaft. Sometimes it won't go all the way in gear. Also there are three places on the shift linkage that have spring tension connections. Two are under the cowl and one at the transaxle. It is important that these springs are tight. If they are broken or loose they will cause shift problems like you have and contribute to the rounded edges you speak of. I will email you.
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