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dsmberge
10-31-2004, 09:42 PM
having some problems with my tranny. the clutch wont disengage far enough and we already relace the clutch master and the slave cylinder. still having the same problems. im at a loss and i cant figure it out. i have a jdm tranny and i had the same problem with the old tranny and i was wondering if soemone out there could help me. drop me a line.
thanks
Brad

unreal808
10-31-2004, 09:49 PM
What was the last thing you did, before the clutch wouldn't disengage?

Shane@DBPerformance
10-31-2004, 10:14 PM
Could be a worn clutch fork/pivot ball. Worn clutch forks are extremely common. I have my own way of measuring clutch forks for wear and measurements from ones at different stages. If it is worn, you can buy a new one from Mitsu for something like $65. Or you can try to ghetto fix it by putting a washer under the pivot ball, or getting a longer slave rod, or by welding a nut onto the part that the clutch adjustment rod threads into for more adjustment.

Actually, have you even tried adjusting the clutch pedal at all yet?

TheBlizzard
11-02-2004, 12:20 PM
Damn Shane, you actually got a problem out of that? All it did for me is give me a fucking headache.

My advice would be, buy a keyboard with shift key.

CRAIG

A//// Guy
11-02-2004, 12:34 PM
Besides capitalization and using commas theres really nothing bad about how he wrote his problem? I understood it just fine.

TheBlizzard
11-02-2004, 12:36 PM
So whats wrong with it then genius?

CRAIG

A//// Guy
11-02-2004, 12:41 PM
Shane gave him all the good starting places and covered most everything that could be wrong with it... thats why I didnt reply.

I guess I just dont see your problem with how he asked his questions??

TheBlizzard
11-02-2004, 01:03 PM
I guess it could be because I came from reading tech threads on NABR. And after reading threads on there where they actually enforce grammar, and make damn sure that people posts relative mods, and also make sure tech posts are as descriptive as possible.

Better to have more information that not enough, and its a plus if its easy to read as well. I mean even year of car would be nice.

As far as his problem goes:

Is the clutch doing the same exact same thing it was doing before you replaced the master cylinder? If it is, its unlikely that you need to adjust your clutch, unless for some reason you got the rod in the exact same spot as it was before you did the master cylinder.

I would lean towards a worn clutch pedal assembly itself, or a worn clutch fork/pivot ball like Shane said.

CRAIG

santa
11-02-2004, 04:21 PM
Its a folcrum ball! I dont understand why you would think that adjusting the clutch peddle wouldnt possibly help him out with his problem? I would start with a flush of the slave cyl. Get some new fluid and bleed the clutch. TRE's web site has a good description on how to bleed your slave cyl. If that doesn't work You could try the washer deal. It is a cheap was of fixing your problem but a pain in the a$$ to do because you have to pull the tranny out again. the exstended slave rod could fix your problem too. I would do all of those if bleeding the slave and adjusting the clutch rod under the dash. The other problem could also be worn syncro's or possibly a bent input shaft(I can't think of the proper name).

Kevin

Kevin

TheBlizzard
11-02-2004, 04:31 PM
The one and only reason I would say it would not be the adjustment rod under the dash is because he said he replaced the master cylinder right? Well you would have to be pretty slick to get the rod in the exact same spot as it was before you replaced the master cylinder to get it to act just like it did before you replaced the master cylinder.

Now if he hadn't replaced the master cylinder, it would be the obvious place to start the troubleshooting process. And as far as bleeding and such, I would be willing to bet he bled the clutch after he did the master and the slave already, but who knows.

CRAIG