🚨 1992 Dodge Daytona: Emergency Neutral
The 1992 Daytona uses a traditional floor-mounted console shifter with a mechanical shift lock mechanism integrated into the console assembly.
🧰 Drafted with AI under the editorial review of Chris Hackleman & Jeff Moore — cross-check against your owner’s manual when possible.
⚠️ Chock the wheels first — neutral means the car can roll. Set the parking brake while you work, never stand downhill of the vehicle, and try a 12-volt jump before any override: power fixes most stuck-in-park problems instantly.
The procedure
- Set the parking brake firmly and chock the wheels
- Turn the ignition key to the ACC or ON position if battery has any charge remaining
- Locate the shift lock override slot - it is a small rectangular opening covered by a plastic cap on the left side of the shifter base, near the button side of the shifter handle
- Use a small flat-blade screwdriver or the key itself to pry off the plastic cap covering the override slot
- Insert a small screwdriver, pen, or similar tool into the override slot and press down firmly
- While holding the override down, press the shifter button and move the shifter to Neutral
- If the shifter will not move, verify the key is in ACC/ON position and the override is fully depressed
Shift-lock override location
Left side of shifter base near the button, covered by a small rectangular plastic cap
With zero electrical power
With completely dead battery, the shift lock may still engage mechanically. The override slot provides mechanical bypass - no electrical power needed for the override itself. If key will not turn in ignition with dead battery (steering lock), you may need to jump-start or charge battery minimally to turn key to ACC position, which releases steering lock and may help shift lock disengage.