Victorofhavoc
Senior Member
- First Name
- Gordan
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2024
- Threads
- 5
- Messages
- 415
- Reaction score
- 233
- Location
- Kansas City
- Car(s)
- Integra type s
- Thread starter
- #121
As far as sharing a res, I think it's a personal view point if it's truly problematic or not. It kind of depends on your use case and frequency, but I can see it having benefits for the dealer and driver at service time. It pretty much guarantees the fluid will be changed, since people often forget about clutch fluid. For cases like this, yeah it's annoying but not the end of the world.Sounds like another adverse consequence of having the clutch and brakes share fluid. Nothing to be done about it, but is that your read?
Obviously track use is hard on the brakes and the fluid, but in my experience not very hard on the clutch - I think street driving is worse. Of the track cars I've had I've never changed clutch fluid until I had to have the motor out (for various issues) and changed the clutch preventively.
(I've changed clutch fluid on plenty of cars, but that was because they were old and there were symptoms. I'm not against it, I just don't think track driving should make it worse.)
Correct me if I'm thinking about this wrong.
To be fair, I'm MUCH more annoyed Honda and acura didn't find a way to rotate the turbo 90 degrees so the intake has a shorter and direct inlet path, the cold side of the turbo stays separate from the exhaust, and the exhaust would have a straight down run instead of a right angle. Maybe ac packaging just got in the way, but it seems like a miss if they didn't even consider it.
I will say when I started bleeding the clutch, before my pressure bleeder forced air in, I DID get air out of the line. Once it was bleeding manually I did find contamination in the clutch as well. Whether this contamination is enough for most people to notice will vary.
I've had clutches work perfectly fine, and then after 40 mins on track fall straight to the floor without engaging the friction disc or pressure plate at all. It all depends on your heat and the system. If you delete the slave cylinder and clutch delay valve, it's much more likely to see clutch heat issues, and you'll definitely need to rotate at least yearly. With them, the cdv will prevent the friction disc from quickly slamming and generating more heat, while the slave cyl will add extra pressure which masks any smaller bubbles. It's also dependent on how much heat your engine is transferring to the transmission. Some cars just run hot (like my Z that runs oil at 285F even with a 32 row oil cooler). Other cars are just bad at transferring that heat elsewhere or don't have a ton of trans fluid so it overheats quickly.
Once I got most of the old fluid out via the driver's caliper inside bleeder, the clutch really didn't have much of the old fluid left. It didn't take a tremendous amount of bleed before it started running much clearer. Maybe two tablespoons or so.
Given how quick and easy it is to bleed manually after doing brakes, I would honestly just throw it onto the todo pile. It's already there, and worst case you can pay a kid (your own or a neighbor's if you don't have your own) to pump the clutch for you a dozen times. 5$ for 15min is a deal for any kid, lol.
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