

btw thanx for the pic of the oil feed & congrats on you victories

Arvin
Moderators: daewoomofo, Moderators Group
Now sticky.exist3nce wrote:To the admins: Can my thread become a sticky like the other turbo threads?
Yah they varied in price alot from $350 (the cheapest) to $1600. But there were alot of motors to choose from locally (within Ontario). I used the site www.car-part.com , they had alot of listings from different wreckers.PrecisionBoost wrote: Good deal on the motor.... I had to bring mine in from the USA to get a good deal.... all the canadian wreckers wanted well over $1000 for the 2.0L motors.
Thanks Tom. Couple more to add to the list:GsiTurbo wrote:Nice motor find!!! I'm jealous now, hehe
I am keeping close eye on your buildup, and so far I like it a lot! Keep up good work, and 'the kill' list.
I haven't heard of anything like this either.PrecisionBoost wrote:
These clutches have been used all over the world (quite a bit in the UK ) and I personally haven't heard of anyone having this kind of trouble.
For that matter kinky had his installed for quite a while before he killed the syncros in his tranny.
I belive his master and slave cylinders are also in poor condition ..... but I have to think that has to do with his racing and the fact that a stiffer pressure plate requires more hydraulic force to actuate it.
I measured the stock clutch vs the aftermarket clutch first thing this morning..... all dimensions of the aftermarket unit are significantly smaller than the stockexist3nce wrote:It appears that the new clutch disc centre (the part that grabs the shaft) is slightly thicker or higher than the stock one (we measured it to be 30/1000 ") and this caused it to push against the slave cylinder with enough force to gauge the top of the cylinder and eventually grab the entire piston and start spinning it with the clutch.As soon as the piston started spinning, the cylinder seal was instantly shredded and the fluid leaked out.
Yah everything on the new disc appears to be the same or smaller than the stock one for all other measurements. We think this is a manufacturing error, something that should have been caught by quality control. The centre piece is either a bit longer, or sticking out a bit too far to the side of the slave cylinder. The pressure plate fingers never came in contact with anything, it was only the centre of the disc that was constantly touching the slave cylinder, and then spinning the piston. I have confidence that the two people installing it are doing it right. They have replaced countless clutches and transmissions on other cars and said they have never seen something like this happen.PrecisionBoost wrote:I measured the stock clutch vs the aftermarket clutch first thing this morning..... all dimensions of the aftermarket unit are significantly smaller than the stockexist3nce wrote:It appears that the new clutch disc centre (the part that grabs the shaft) is slightly thicker or higher than the stock one (we measured it to be 30/1000 ") and this caused it to push against the slave cylinder with enough force to gauge the top of the cylinder and eventually grab the entire piston and start spinning it with the clutch.As soon as the piston started spinning, the cylinder seal was instantly shredded and the fluid leaked out.
I don't know what you guys were measuring but the thickness of the aftermarket center is about 1/8" less than the stock one.... as opposed to 0.030" larger like you said above.
Even the outer diameter is smaller.
What I'm confused about here is the fact that that bearing comes in contact with the fingers of the pressure plate first..... so if the bearing wasn't spinning it should have scored the surface of the pressure plate fingers.
From my point of view everything points to a damaged thrust/release bearing as far as I can see.
PrecisionBoost wrote:Tom (Gsiturbo) is sitting next to me and he just made a good point..... if your factory clutch was slipping and creating a significant amount of heat it's quite possible that it may be responsible for the problems with failure of your thrust/release bearing