Lazy-Ferret
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2012
- Messages
- 5,217
Since I have had this Terrano, the Clutch pedal has had a habit of not always coming back up to the top. Not a problem, it worked ok, so I would just nudge it with the tip of my toe and it would pop back up.
I did a fair bit of searching on the web, and while it seamed to be a common problem, there did not seem to be any definitive answers to what caused it. Some people blamed the master, some the slave cylinder, others the actual pedal, or the pipe. One put it down to the pressure plate of the clutch, and the thrust bearing, and the best... someone blamed it on a pipe that ran to the back of the car (what a weirdo, a clutch pipe that runs to the back of the car:naughty) Everyone knows the clutch assembly has no reason to go to the back of the car...:augie
First thing I did was to take the pedal assembly out, and make new bearings for it, as this seemed the easiest and simplest place to start. I put it back in, and thought I had fixed the issue.
Over the next couple of weeks though, it came back, and then started to get worse resulting in having no Clutch if I forgot to pop the pedal back up. The next stage was the pedal would sink over night, and I would have to lift it up by hand in the morning. I checked the system over, but it all seemed OK, so I decided that maybe there was some air in it.
Being a typical "Techie", Manuals are for wimps, I bled the system using the bleed screws at the master and slave cylinder, and was happy it all started to work again.... for 2 days. After that, the pedal would sink to the floor every night, and the fluid was going down in the reservoir as well now.
Ok, it's now time to RTFM, and have a proper look.
Now in all my years of driving I have had many hydraulic clutches, and bleeding them is not rocket science.. but when the manual says to "bleed the clutch from behind the rear wheels..." I did start to think that someone was on a wind up. I get under the car, and discover that this time there is brake fluid all over the slave cylinder and the flexible pipe, and.... a very long pipe that runs from the clutch slave cylinder hose to the back of the car. What? Why? I trace it to the end, and there right above the rear axle it ends, with a block containing a bleed nipple.... (Ok so that guy was not a weirdo after all, must make a point of reading his posts more carefully in the future)
Anyway, I got a new slave cylinder, and flexible pipe, then after they brought me round from telling me the price, I went home and fitted them in the pouring rain. Touch wood, it all seems OK now...
I think I even found the original problem on mine as well. The flexible pipe had some bubbles in the outer cover, and it looks like the inner pipe has split where the crimp is, and the fluid was leaking into the outer cover causing it to bubble up, and then the fluid was drawn back in when the pedal returned to it's proper place. Once one of the bubbles in the outer cover finally split, things became more obvious, but you could only really see them once the pipe was off, and wiped over to clean it up. Fingers crossed it now seems to be working OK.
So, what is the long pipe for??? I wondered if it was some sort of hydraulic damper, but surely the pipe would need to have a coil or two in for that, and I notice the pipe that runs from the master to the flexible bit does have 3 or so coils in it anyway, so that would be the damper.... anyone know?
I did a fair bit of searching on the web, and while it seamed to be a common problem, there did not seem to be any definitive answers to what caused it. Some people blamed the master, some the slave cylinder, others the actual pedal, or the pipe. One put it down to the pressure plate of the clutch, and the thrust bearing, and the best... someone blamed it on a pipe that ran to the back of the car (what a weirdo, a clutch pipe that runs to the back of the car:naughty) Everyone knows the clutch assembly has no reason to go to the back of the car...:augie
First thing I did was to take the pedal assembly out, and make new bearings for it, as this seemed the easiest and simplest place to start. I put it back in, and thought I had fixed the issue.
Over the next couple of weeks though, it came back, and then started to get worse resulting in having no Clutch if I forgot to pop the pedal back up. The next stage was the pedal would sink over night, and I would have to lift it up by hand in the morning. I checked the system over, but it all seemed OK, so I decided that maybe there was some air in it.
Being a typical "Techie", Manuals are for wimps, I bled the system using the bleed screws at the master and slave cylinder, and was happy it all started to work again.... for 2 days. After that, the pedal would sink to the floor every night, and the fluid was going down in the reservoir as well now.
Ok, it's now time to RTFM, and have a proper look.
Now in all my years of driving I have had many hydraulic clutches, and bleeding them is not rocket science.. but when the manual says to "bleed the clutch from behind the rear wheels..." I did start to think that someone was on a wind up. I get under the car, and discover that this time there is brake fluid all over the slave cylinder and the flexible pipe, and.... a very long pipe that runs from the clutch slave cylinder hose to the back of the car. What? Why? I trace it to the end, and there right above the rear axle it ends, with a block containing a bleed nipple.... (Ok so that guy was not a weirdo after all, must make a point of reading his posts more carefully in the future)
Anyway, I got a new slave cylinder, and flexible pipe, then after they brought me round from telling me the price, I went home and fitted them in the pouring rain. Touch wood, it all seems OK now...
I think I even found the original problem on mine as well. The flexible pipe had some bubbles in the outer cover, and it looks like the inner pipe has split where the crimp is, and the fluid was leaking into the outer cover causing it to bubble up, and then the fluid was drawn back in when the pedal returned to it's proper place. Once one of the bubbles in the outer cover finally split, things became more obvious, but you could only really see them once the pipe was off, and wiped over to clean it up. Fingers crossed it now seems to be working OK.
So, what is the long pipe for??? I wondered if it was some sort of hydraulic damper, but surely the pipe would need to have a coil or two in for that, and I notice the pipe that runs from the master to the flexible bit does have 3 or so coils in it anyway, so that would be the damper.... anyone know?