Throwout bearing?
Thread Starter
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 476
From: Chicago, IL
Throwout bearing?
I hope I spelled it right...
10,000 miles ago I installed a brand new Exedy Stage I and Fidanza flywheel.
Experienced some problems with the start up and the jerkiness when shifting 2nd, 3rd, 4th... 5th gears.
Other then that, excellent... Grip, Revs, felt much lighter...
Anyways.... Last week, my clutch went out again. This time a throwout bearing was broke. What gives? Frined of mine (he did the install and the fix) told me - aggresive driving or bad part (first time)... I wasn't all that aggresive, in retrospective....
Opinions?
thanks
10,000 miles ago I installed a brand new Exedy Stage I and Fidanza flywheel.
Experienced some problems with the start up and the jerkiness when shifting 2nd, 3rd, 4th... 5th gears.
Other then that, excellent... Grip, Revs, felt much lighter...
Anyways.... Last week, my clutch went out again. This time a throwout bearing was broke. What gives? Frined of mine (he did the install and the fix) told me - aggresive driving or bad part (first time)... I wasn't all that aggresive, in retrospective....
Opinions?
thanks
I had some of the exact same issues (starting problem) and it wouldn't go into gear.
Turned out to be my clutch disc springs broke out somehow.
But the jerkyness is all driver, gota re-learn how to drive your car w/ that light flywheel.
Turned out to be my clutch disc springs broke out somehow.
But the jerkyness is all driver, gota re-learn how to drive your car w/ that light flywheel.
Thread Starter
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 476
From: Chicago, IL
ok...? that's what I thought too. Even managed to almost get rid of it while shifting... (bit more/less clutch/revs when required) and that does it.
Now, when I am IN the gear... say 3rd, 5th... just cruising along... let go of the gass, and step hard on it, jerkiness happens... IN the gear already.
Now, when I am IN the gear... say 3rd, 5th... just cruising along... let go of the gass, and step hard on it, jerkiness happens... IN the gear already.
That's normal - anytime you unwind the drivetrain you need to really be soft letting off the throttle or else the gear lash will 'thunk' the whole car. Light flywheels and unsprung clutches make the car much more sensitive to it.
One installation question: did your friend clean the pressure plate and flywheel with carb cleaner when he installed it?
As for getting good undamaging engagement, engage the clutch like this:
1) Lift the clutch pedal steadily. To get extra smooth engagement, lift it slowly. Never, ever pause the pedal in the friction zone - only adjust how fast or slow you're lifting the clutch pedal in the friction zone.
2) Either hold the throttle still or slowly apply gas during clutch engagement. Just like you should never stop the clutch pedal while it's engaging, you should not vary what the throttle is doing either.
So in summary, a better shift is just a simultaneous clutch up, throttle down. Vary the speed of this to adjust the aggressiveness, but never pause.
Dave
One installation question: did your friend clean the pressure plate and flywheel with carb cleaner when he installed it?
As for getting good undamaging engagement, engage the clutch like this:
1) Lift the clutch pedal steadily. To get extra smooth engagement, lift it slowly. Never, ever pause the pedal in the friction zone - only adjust how fast or slow you're lifting the clutch pedal in the friction zone.
2) Either hold the throttle still or slowly apply gas during clutch engagement. Just like you should never stop the clutch pedal while it's engaging, you should not vary what the throttle is doing either.
So in summary, a better shift is just a simultaneous clutch up, throttle down. Vary the speed of this to adjust the aggressiveness, but never pause.
Dave
Originally Posted by dgeesaman
That's normal - anytime you unwind the drivetrain you need to really be soft letting off the throttle or else the gear lash will 'thunk' the whole car. Light flywheels and unsprung clutches make the car much more sensitive to it.
One installation question: did your friend clean the pressure plate and flywheel with carb cleaner when he installed it?
As for getting good undamaging engagement, engage the clutch like this:
1) Lift the clutch pedal steadily. To get extra smooth engagement, lift it slowly. Never, ever pause the pedal in the friction zone - only adjust how fast or slow you're lifting the clutch pedal in the friction zone.
2) Either hold the throttle still or slowly apply gas during clutch engagement. Just like you should never stop the clutch pedal while it's engaging, you should not vary what the throttle is doing either.
So in summary, a better shift is just a simultaneous clutch up, throttle down. Vary the speed of this to adjust the aggressiveness, but never pause.
Dave
One installation question: did your friend clean the pressure plate and flywheel with carb cleaner when he installed it?
As for getting good undamaging engagement, engage the clutch like this:
1) Lift the clutch pedal steadily. To get extra smooth engagement, lift it slowly. Never, ever pause the pedal in the friction zone - only adjust how fast or slow you're lifting the clutch pedal in the friction zone.
2) Either hold the throttle still or slowly apply gas during clutch engagement. Just like you should never stop the clutch pedal while it's engaging, you should not vary what the throttle is doing either.
So in summary, a better shift is just a simultaneous clutch up, throttle down. Vary the speed of this to adjust the aggressiveness, but never pause.
Dave
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