Paul_G
Well-Known Member
Yes 10.5" clutch. I adjust it to have free play at the clutch fork, not the pedal.Roll the pressure plate over and snap a pic of the fingers. How did you adjust it? Is that a 10 1/2"?
Yes 10.5" clutch. I adjust it to have free play at the clutch fork, not the pedal.Roll the pressure plate over and snap a pic of the fingers. How did you adjust it? Is that a 10 1/2"?
The 505 was in the car for short time during the break in of the clutch, about 100 miles. When I pulled the 505 out the clutch was glazed over a bit. The 505 at full throttle would slip through the clutch even when rolling down the street. Now that was with a new, not yet broke in clutch.^ I think his previous post goes a way in explaining what happened.
It was first installed behind the 505 which he said easily drove through the clutch.
So, was probably already glazed when put behind the 383. (Just my guess anyway)
Using factory linkage and TO bearing. Hydraulic dual disc clutch may be in my future.Is the OP running a hydraulic TO bearing?
With all the clutch dust on there I would say it is well used. T/O bearing to PP finger gap should be 1/8"-3/16". Cycle the pedal a few times and recheck.Yes 10.5" clutch. I adjust it to have free play at the clutch fork, not the pedal.
View attachment 1339813
McLeod Racing 75209 McLeod Super StreetPro Clutch Kits | Summit Racing
It is this one.
Mcleod clutches take 500 to 700 mile break in before you can load them fully. I am going to the Duct Tape Drags in 3 weeks. No time to break in a new clutch. I am thinking about just throwing a new disk in it as it is. Give it a quick sanding with a big flat board and a new disk. Either the
500 - 700 miles seems excessive.same dual friction it it now, or full ceramic. Hopefully bypass the breaking in of a completely new clutch. Does that work?