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How Much Horsepower? Clutch Slipping

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Need help, Truck died

5600 3rd gear grinding

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JCarroll said:
I received my new cerametallic disc today, pulled the transmission (Wow! :rolleyes: What fun). Found clutch burned badly. I'll have the flywheel resurfaced tomorrow and put it back together. Hopefully no more slippage.



Sorry to hi-jack thread...



But I finally stacked my TST with an EZ tonight, and on the way home, I dumped it at about 2500 in 2nd - power shifted to third - then to fourth (much to my amazement, still spinning) -- BUT moved only about 15 feet,



Well I paniced and back out at 3100 rpms (35 lbs boost)... yep, barked the turbo real bad... I'm think'in I must have blown thru that clutch ??



1) what is a good comparison to what a burning clutch smells like,

2) what is a reliable way to test for slipping clutch?



After that happened, I tried putting it in 5th gear and from 1000 rpms on, I stomped on it, From what I could tell It just gripped and went



I hope I was just roasting the tires, But it was dark and the darn exhaust is so loud, I could not hear the tires sqeal, NOR did I look at the speedo



darn me and my childish behavior
 
Mark,

I think its more of your crazy driving habits that hurt transmission's rather than dual disk clutches in general.

Many midwesterners drive DD's every day with minimal issues. :)
 
Tomey,



The easiest way to check clutch strength is to put it in 6th gear, get it to ~1500 RPMs, and then stomp it to the floor. If it's gonna slip it will slip there. In your case I think you were just burning rubber. The lower the gear you're in the less stress the clutch "feels", so you should be good to go... . for now :)



John
 
JCarroll...



I would highly recommend not putting your clutch back in without replacing the pressure plate. The diaphragm in the pressure plate once heated can loose its clamping power and I am sure it is also grooved and will make seating the new disc very difficult as well as shortening the over all life of the clutch.



Good luck



Peter
 
jwilliams3 said:
Mark,

I think its more of your crazy driving habits that hurt transmission's rather than dual disk clutches in general.

Many midwesterners drive DD's every day with minimal issues. :)



That truck had HUGE EDMs, Huge DVs, B1-BigBrother Twins. When I sold it I detuned it. . Honed 370s , stock DVs, and hx35-HT3b Twins... It pegged a 1200ftlb dyno before 2000rpm and made 586rwhp.



It was making 80+psi on the Big twins with a 16cm seconday housing and a 2" NewGen wastegate. It wasn't driving, it was power:D:D



I build them to be driven... HARD!!! :cool:
 
banshee said:
Tomey,



The easiest way to check clutch strength is to put it in 6th gear, get it to ~1500 RPMs, and then stomp it to the floor. If it's gonna slip it will slip there. In your case I think you were just burning rubber. The lower the gear you're in the less stress the clutch "feels", so you should be good to go... . for now :)



John



Well good, I was a bit worried -- I did try the "stomp in last gear" thing, and I did not feel any slipping... I guess I was just amazed that I kept the burnout thru the 3-4 shift



I think my exhaust is angled towards my right tire, I wonder if that helps the spin? :D



PS - what everyone has said about the EZ-TST stack is correct, I will never go back now
 
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