Yeah, could be ...
Sounds like you have a fluid drive. RND is the basic shift pattern, eh right?Okay if so, you probably have a Borg Warner Velvet drive transmission. Nice reliable tranny. Very simple and very durable. The shift selector is detented on a ball bearing spring loaded to holes drilled in the selector plate. Probably the weakest point of this unit. Reason being is, if the linkage adjustment isn't 'length related' to the shift selector then the ball detent isn't quite seated into the selector hole and thus can vibrate off position. Since this selector plate is bolted on the valve body spool, it may find control pressures high enough to pop it into reverse. Reason being is reverse is the highest pressure circuit in this tranny, and so form follows fashion so to speak. The highest fashion of force will steer the valve spool in the direction. And of course, my guess is reverse. Not that I have seen this happen, but I have bench dyno'd these transmissions and have known the shift plate to glide into that position if undetented from neutral. Playing around with such units I found drive will tend to exert a bit of pressure on the neutral side of the shift plate.Oh well, what I would do is to check the shift selector position against the shift plate position at the tranny, making certain both ends agree, in that bothe ends are dead on the selection anticipated.Should be a simple and easy check.sardo