08-11-2009 | #11 |
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Westminster, Maryland
Posts: 3,689
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Re: Help please with clutch master cylinder
Sal,
The problem that I see with pressure bleeders like the one you linked to is that you have to make sure that the line you connect to the bleeder port on the slave cylinder is free of air when you start or you are introducing more air into the system. Also, when you pressure bleed from the bottom (slave cylinder), you will overflow the reservoir and spill fluid down the sides of the reservoir to the area you are concerned about. If you wrap a rag around the reservoir you may be able to catch the overflow. Jim |
08-11-2009 | #12 | |
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Jacksonville, FL USA
Posts: 4,645
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Re: Help please with clutch master cylinder
Quote:
On the M/C. I'm not an authority on this, but I'd toss it and try another part...easy for me to spend otherpeople's $. JMHO, try using a tissue to soak up what you can see. Re-bleed the system. Check it again & see what's up, then make a call. If I saw fluisd the next time around? In the trash with that one. Yes, leave the spacer. It maintains the right geomerty so the M/C's piston stays in a flat plane when it travels the bore as it is pushed by the push rod. Tom
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1990 ZR-1, Black/grey, #2233, stock. ZR-1 Net Reg Founding Member #316 & NCM member |
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08-11-2009 | #13 | |
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Livermore, California
Posts: 61
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Re: Help please with clutch master cylinder
Quote:
Unfortunately I still am not getting 100% disingagement from the clutch (especially in 1st and reverse). Mind you its not bad, but I can still feel the car barely want to move when I put it in first with the pedal all the way to the floor. If I pump the pedal a couple of times I almost never have a problem getting it into 1st or reverse. All I can think is that threre is some major air pocket in there somewhere which cannot surface - should I be reverse bleeding this thing now? |
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08-12-2009 | #14 |
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Houston 90 Red ZR-1
Posts: 2,320
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Re: Help please with clutch master cylinder
Yes reverse bleed it salvator. Just have your son stand over the brake fluid reservour and tell you when there are no more air bubbles coming up and then just fill it up the rest of the way. You should notice instant preasure in the clutch peddle. And your done. All we did was fill a big serenge with clutch fluid. Loosen the bleed screw and connect a clear rubber hose from the serenge to the bleed screw and slowley sqweeze the serenge. Your reservour will start to fill up with fluid and air bubbles. Once there are no more air bubbles just top off the reservour and thats it. Usually takes 5 minutes.
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08-12-2009 | #15 | |
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Livermore, California
Posts: 61
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Re: Help please with clutch master cylinder
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08-12-2009 | #16 |
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Crystal Lake, IL
Posts: 7,194
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Re: Help please with clutch master cylinder
Are you sure the rod is on the clutch fork?
I think the bleeding issue is alittle overplayed, mine worked from the 2nd or third pump....I had issues at first but the rod was not in the fork....once I put the rod in the fork provision, no issues
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LGAFF 90 #966-150K miles-sold 92 #234-sold 1987 Callaway TT #17 1991 ZR-1 #1359 |
08-12-2009 | #17 |
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Livermore, California
Posts: 61
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Re: Help please with clutch master cylinder
The rod is definitely at the fork I made that my main priority when installing the slave (I heard horror stories about what happened when people installed it off the center of the fork). Like I said, the clutch is working (pedal pressure is there, and I can shift), its just not 100%
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08-12-2009 | #18 |
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Jacksonville, FL USA
Posts: 4,645
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Re: Help please with clutch master cylinder
JMHO, assuming that the install went correctly, and that you give the bleeding a shot with the turkey baster, and you still are not at 100% dis-engagement then you have deffective parts.
Sal, that is the only conclusion left. This is like I'm watching a replay of what I went thru back in 05. However, I would e-mail Bill as he may see something that we're all missing on this case. Remember, according to GM a 20% deffective rate is at the top of their acceptable range. They said back in early 2000's that the spillage rate was 15% and that's why they were not doing much about it till Bill and Superrior brought it to their attention. It looks like they never really did much about the quality control issue to me anyway. JMHO
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1990 ZR-1, Black/grey, #2233, stock. ZR-1 Net Reg Founding Member #316 & NCM member |
08-14-2009 | #19 |
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Livermore, California
Posts: 61
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Re: Help please with clutch master cylinder
Tell me - what are symptoms of not having the rod seated correctly on the fork? I mean, its obvious you will not get any clutch action (engage/disengage), but would it still possibly work, just not perfectly?
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08-14-2009 | #20 | |
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Livermore, California
Posts: 61
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Re: Help please with clutch master cylinder
Quote:
I felt comfortable enough to drive it to work (40 miles each way), and after I drove it awhile the pedal seemed even firmer. I can shift it now with my pinkie - and I think this is what we are after here. I do still think, however, there might still be air in the system because I absolutely must have the pedal all the way to the floor board, otherwise the car will complain. Thanks guys |
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