I do like @Ridgeline says. I have many vintage trucks and have never had to replace a brake. Got many of them with years of miles from other owners and still have those brakes in them. Only use the brake to nudge it into gear from forward to reverse or vise versa, or at dead stop but Most of the time you can feather the clutch to let it mesh into a gear when at a stop. If you leave it in a gear to the stop. If truck is on an incline most times it will slip into gear without touching peddle by just controlling the roll speed to start in lowest gear it will go in. And most of all do not push peddle all the way down with truck moving.
Do’s & Dont’s on clutch & clutch brake!
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by ua96, Aug 26, 2024.
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In the 44 years I’ve been driving, and trucks I’ve driven, NOT ONCE has the clutch brake ever failed.
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I’m willing to bet that being in the dump truck game the peddle is going all the way to the floor and brake is getting hit every time the truck goes from forward to reverse or vise versa and every time a bed lift is done With the truck still moving. That will kill it fast. I’ve seen guys do it without them really realizing it. In some busy locations being in a hurry to get dumped or loaded and out to the next round.
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OldeSkool, Oxbow and SmallPackage Thank this.
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It sounds like the weekend driver abused the clutch.
Being that this is a dump truck, I would suspect that this self-adjusting clutch isn't actually adjusting itself properly anymore due to improper lubrication, the possibility of material getting up inside there, or both.OldeSkool Thanks this. -
W923 Thanks this.
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I had to teach one of our new drivers how to engage the PTO with with an automated transmission the other day - which his trainer should have done before they signed off on him.
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