AJ wrote:
feralsprint wrote:
Aussie
if not it may be that the clutch plate has rusted to the flywheel. if that is the case start it and warm it up and then stop it put into first gear and with your foot on the clutch and drive it about and keep using the brakes to try and get the clutch to let go
Jon
Sorry to be a wet blanket , but you risk doing serious damage to your engine/gearbox by doing this . If the normal methods of adjustment do not work , you will have to dismantle the clutch/flywheel assembly to see what is causing it . I know its a pain , but its the best way ......cheers
EDIT : I tried this once when i was young and silly ( now im just old and silly) . Seemed to work ok until a week later when the clutch plate dis-integrated , causing all kinds of damage ...
Well I am old and experienced and as the car has not sat to long there is a chance that the rusting if it is rusted will not be that bad and it is a chance worth taking most of the time they will let go before the car goes very far and if it doesn't let goe within a couple hundred metres go and take the clutch out, the worst that will happen is that the linings will rip off the driven plate and the only damage that might happen is to the faces of the flywheel and back plate which should be machined even if you pull it down and replace the clutch

old experienced and an Automotive Engineer
Bob your crank must of been cracked in the first place because by having your foot on the clutch and using the brakes to load the engine is exactly what a dyno does but the brake is in the dyno
Jon
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Roundies and Clubbies(except vans) are both ugly that is why I have Midas and a van
1293 Mini Midas Bronze,1275 Clubman van
