The Docmeister
Active Member
Been lurking here for a while, but am finally off tomorrow morning to have a look at a Freelander 1 1.8 whose 'clutch has popped'.
I've had a search about and see that the problem most likely stems from a seized actuator arm, but is there anything else that the goosed hydraulics may be hiding?
When asked about what had happened the seller described it as "the clutch was working fine, just difficult to get in gear, which made us initially think it could be a gearbox problem but on asking mechanic who did brakes he reckoned it was the clutch slave cylinder at fault, then it made a huge pop and clutch pedal has to be pulled back up an won't go into any gear now!"
So I'll check the state of the slave bracket, if I decide to take the car I'll soak the rod in WD40 and go order a replacement hydraulic setup. Hopefully if I then return to fit the hydraulics, the rod will free off after its dousing and some fiddling.
Is the replacement as self explanatory as it's made out to be? Air-box out of the way and I should be able to see what I'm doing?
Any advice would be appreciated - perhaps a bit premature, since it's going to depend on what the 'big envelope of receipts and paperwork' shows up as having been done on the 120k miles 1999 vehicle!
I've had a search about and see that the problem most likely stems from a seized actuator arm, but is there anything else that the goosed hydraulics may be hiding?
When asked about what had happened the seller described it as "the clutch was working fine, just difficult to get in gear, which made us initially think it could be a gearbox problem but on asking mechanic who did brakes he reckoned it was the clutch slave cylinder at fault, then it made a huge pop and clutch pedal has to be pulled back up an won't go into any gear now!"
So I'll check the state of the slave bracket, if I decide to take the car I'll soak the rod in WD40 and go order a replacement hydraulic setup. Hopefully if I then return to fit the hydraulics, the rod will free off after its dousing and some fiddling.
Is the replacement as self explanatory as it's made out to be? Air-box out of the way and I should be able to see what I'm doing?
Any advice would be appreciated - perhaps a bit premature, since it's going to depend on what the 'big envelope of receipts and paperwork' shows up as having been done on the 120k miles 1999 vehicle!