This is of interest to me. When I first bought the truck, I got 3 clutch adjustments the first 2 weeks and the clutch went entirely. Put in a reman. That was May.
In July I needed a clutch adjustment and got one. I started using all my gears then and have been, but now I'm due for one again. Those 3 inches of free-play is now about an inch or less.
I'm not sure what else I can do. I don't apply fuel until the truck is moving a little. I switch around 1500. I think there might be something else at play related to why the first one went. I always pull heavy and always in dirt/mud/sand.
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Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by PharmPhail, Jan 26, 2009.
Page 293 of 481
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Are you ridding the clutch????,...........
Have yous learned to float gears when shifting????,.........That alone can save on a clutch,......Pete_379X Thanks this. -
I'd like to know how much Pharm spent total on mechanical repairs and towing for breakdowns up to when his motor mount incident caused him to declare failure.
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there are reasons why things happen to us good bad or indiffernt,but just a note to keep inside ones head,if you havent seen the movie with hellen hunt (),pay it forward) whats happening on this site is just that,those of them that are able to come to robs time of need,i think his honesty and his being up front with his pro and cons of his adventures so far ,speak volumes for him as a man,the respect that he show people and the positive aditude,to me one cant ask for a better person ,at least hes been honest and he #### sure knows how to laugh when things bite the dust,some times i think some poeple should take a lesson from this like hongkongphoey an a couple of others, negativeity never gets you anywhere!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Rob, the clutch is there for two things and two things ONLY.
#1 is to get the whole thing moving. Get off the clutch as fast as reasonable without jerking the drivetrain/rig around.
#2 to get the box out of a gear when it hangs while floating.
these are the ONLY reasons to press that pedal.
Running around melbourne, doing local deliveries which involved bumping docks uphill and such, i was lucky to need 2 adjustments a year.
remember, at NO time, i repeat NO TIME sould you ride the clutch.
Most rigs have brass friction material, which when slipped eats the other friction surfaces. its to be used in an either on or off fasion only. -
stranger very good advice,but remember my linkage was set wrong due to those swivels being worn from the weather,this truck was a northern truck,my clutch is new the only time i use it is to start out and to go in reverse,they call it floating gears now back when i started it was called sliping it in with out the clutch,have driven it this way since iv had it and the heaveyest iv hauled is 48,000,so every thing is back where its suposed to be, but what you said about clutch adjustments all depends on the drivers habits is very true, the harder one is on the clutch the sooner somethings gona let loose and brake,cause theres only so much adjustment
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I wasn't speaking to anyone in paticular, as this was an information post only. Worn linkage, bad motor mounts, or any number of worn components can cause free play issues.
To keep the clutch brake in adjustment, don't slam the pedal to the floor everytime the truck is put in gear. Push the pedal almost all the way down, then wait 10-20 seconds to give the clutch and input shaft time to slow down its spinning, then ease the pedal slowly on down until the clutch brake is engaged.
Also, DON'T use the clutch brake between gears as a way to speed shift.
This will save many clutch adjustments and grinding of gears.The Challenger, luvtheroad and dino6960 Thank this. -
Hey dino, on your KW clutch linkage, is the swivelhead thingy on the arm attached to the trans on the inside or toward the frame?
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PharmPhail Thanks this.
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