tomcat59alan
Well-Known Member
The slave cylinder piston popped out on mine when the roll pins sheared so that is a lot of movement you have
Well that is the odd thing..The slave cylinder piston popped out on mine when the roll pins sheared so that is a lot of movement you have
ive had quite often now cover warpsWhen a new clutch is fitted the slave piston should be fully retracted. As the spinner plate wears slave piston will move along the cylinder to a new start position because the release arm does not go back as far. Automatically adjusting the clutch. If all has been assembled correctly, only thing i can see causing this problem is weak diaphragm fingers. Had this on an LUK pressure plate a few years ago were the diaphragm fingers had not been tempered and just bent.
It is a crazy situation for sure Wammers.
New master, flexi hose and new reservoir to master hose all fitted.
Bled the system, held the clutch slave back during bleeding... Clutch felt great on three depressions and popped out on the forth and leaked fluid everywhere.
In almost 30 years as a Porsche mechanic at the top of my game and a strong reputation, this Range Rover is the first problem that has ever threatened to beat me.
I have got to the point where I have a similar theory that the wrong clutch is installed or one with weak fingers.
When this clutch first went in, I managed to get half way through a test drive and the clutch felt great, but probably 20 depressions in total before it popped, but as time goes on, it seems to be less and less.
One of the guys here keeps saying he thinks the roll pins have sheered, but I keep telling him that if that has happened we would not be able to pop the piston back into the slave, bleed it and try again, the clutch arm would have moved around rather than always coming back to the same place with no play.