rojizostang
i love my cams
/\/\he has a twisted input shaft...
/\/\he has a twisted input shaft...
I immediately liked what I heard from Liberty's. Out of all the tranny shops I talked to, I liked them the best by far. My trans is in route to them as we speak. I have heard of a hardened 10 spline shaft but at this point with everything that I have been through, I am going 26 spline. I got a new clutch disk and flywheel also ordered today. Thanks again for setting me straight. Damn, if you weren't so far away I would buy you a 24 pack.hmmmm......did they say anything about a hardend 10 spline shaft? i have someone making me an offer on his transmission out of his 2010. i'm still thinking about picking one up and having it upgraded and holding it in reseerve until mine goes DOA. Now i wish i had mine sent out while the clutch and slave cylinder job was being done...
BTW...gotta give credit where it's due...US-1 turned me on to liberty...it wasn't an idea of mine

I immediately liked what I heard from Liberty's. Out of all the tranny shops I talked to, I liked them the best by far. My trans is in route to them as we speak. I have heard of a hardened 10 spline shaft but at this point with everything that I have been through, I am going 26 spline. I got a new clutch disk and flywheel also ordered today. Thanks again for setting me straight. Damn, if you weren't so far away I would buy you a 24 pack.![]()
My spec chatters just a bit when slowly releasing, don't think yours is suppose to. Try pulling a vacum on it and see if the symptoms change. DO you have the Mcloud slave?So back to the original topic, does anyone have any tips for knowing when you need a shim? My XRT/6060 combo chatters like crazy, and I think the TOB is either going bad or needs something.
From this experience, I have learned that a shim behind the slave will change where the clutch engages and disengages. If it disengages too close to the floor then a shim is needed. But who knows how thick? Trial and error taking the trans in and out appears to be the only way. Fuck that! From this experience, even though I discovered that my input shaft was twisted, from now on if I change my clutch, I will replace the flywheel with a new one from the same manufacturer. That should reduce the chances of a shim being needed. In fact I went ahead and ordered an Exedy flywheel along with my new 26 spline disk just to reduce the chance further more. I also ordered a .150 shim just in case but god forbid if I need it...lol Even turning down a flywheel a few thousands has an effect. I guess if you were to measure the thickness of a flywheel that you know is correct for a certain clutch before it is turned down, you could remeasure it afterward and add a shim behind the slave that is the same thickness as what was removed. I believe that would be the only situation where you would know for sure before putting it all together. If the transmission bell housing had a big window in it where you could get in there to take measurements, you could probably shim it properly and only have to remove the trans one time to put the proper shim in. In other situations, I don't see any other way than that putting it all together and driving the car to check the clutch operation hoping like hell you got it right as the only option. If someone knows a better way to do it on our cars, I would love to hear about it.

Thanks! I was unaware that a disk could be replined. That's good to know. Exedy didn't even mention it when I talked with their tech support. Anyway, since what happened, I have rethought my clutch. I have decided to go back with a Mach 500 instead of a 600. The 500 disk has 20% less friction coefficient than the 600 so it doesn't lock up quite as fast. That should soften the hit up some. I still will have more than enough clutch for my power. The only difference between the 500 and the 600 is the disk. The pressure plate is the same. I honestly believe the 600 was overkill for my car. ( lesson learned) That may very well have had something to do with me twisting the input shaft. I'm telling you, that 600 grabs like a mofo. Well anyway, my new disk in on its way. It was a special order straight from Exedy. I also ordered their billet flywheel to go along with it.oh and KDT... i don't know if Exedy is like spec but spec can resplined their clutches for 59 plus shipping... just seen where you said you was gonnna order a new one...
Thanks! I was unaware that a disk could be replined. That's good to know. Exedy didn't even mention it when I talked with their tech support. Anyway, since what happened, I have rethought my clutch. I have decided to go back with a Mach 500 instead of a 600. The 500 disk has 20% less friction coefficient than the 600 so it doesn't lock up quite as fast. That should soften the hit up some. I still will have more than enough clutch for my power. The only difference between the 500 and the 600 is the disk. The pressure plate is the same. I honestly believe the 600 was overkill for my car. ( lesson learned) That may very well have had something to do with me twisting the input shaft. I'm telling you, that 600 grabs like a mofo. Well anyway, my new disk in on its way. It was a special order straight from Exedy. I also ordered their billet flywheel to go along with it.
I wish I knew for sure...lol My stock clutch started slipping a little over the summer. Mainly in third gear at wide open throttle. It progressively got worse until I replaced it in late August. I went through the standard 500 mile break-in on the new clutch. The very first time I ran it through the gears, I did a quick shift to third to see how it would grab. The clutch grabbed hard and the car reared up. It never did that with the stock clutch. From then on it would grind going into third if I shifted fast. If I had to guess, I would say that's when it happened.How did you twist your input shaft?
I would guess there might be something wrong with the master cylinder. That's the only thing the brakes and the slave have in common.Some great info. Glad it worked out for you. I have had the dead brake and clutch pedal thing happen to me recently but never noticed any leaks....how would the brake and clutch pedal be related?
Sorry to butt in, I've been researching the shim-the-slave-cylinder thing as I'm getting ready to install a Mach 350 setup in my car. The clutch and brake share the same fluid supply, so if (when) the fluid gets hot it can affect both systems. I've fitted a motorcycle fluid reservoir for the clutch for my car to alleviate this condition.Some great info. Glad it worked out for you. I have had the dead brake and clutch pedal thing happen to me recently but never noticed any leaks....how would the brake and clutch pedal be related?