Mike's_Taffeta
Well-Known Member
When it comes tohydraulic clutch problems you have obvious issues like leaks, torn boots, cracked rubber lines, kinked rigid lines, or even broken pedals (1st gen DSM's) then you have the tricky problems like air getting in the system.
If you don't have a leak or any of the above stated obvious problems, then its a process of elimination. If you have a buddy with the same car then maybe you could start swapping components to see which is faulty. Its a tedious task but its better then forking out cash to a shop.
My friend has a 97 eclipse spyder that we did an auto to manual swap on. For the longest time he could not figure out why his clutch kept slipping. He had replaced all the lines, slave cylinder and master cylinder and still the problem persisted. So I went over there checked everything, bypassed the clutch dampener (used to help absorb the shock of the clutch engaging) and bled the system for an hour. After that it worked great, he was able to tear up and down the streets with out any slipping from the clutch.
If you don't have a leak or any of the above stated obvious problems, then its a process of elimination. If you have a buddy with the same car then maybe you could start swapping components to see which is faulty. Its a tedious task but its better then forking out cash to a shop.
My friend has a 97 eclipse spyder that we did an auto to manual swap on. For the longest time he could not figure out why his clutch kept slipping. He had replaced all the lines, slave cylinder and master cylinder and still the problem persisted. So I went over there checked everything, bypassed the clutch dampener (used to help absorb the shock of the clutch engaging) and bled the system for an hour. After that it worked great, he was able to tear up and down the streets with out any slipping from the clutch.