A good friend and I spent last Tuesday installing a new clutch in my Cummins H. O. 6-speed. Together we found a source for an organic-ferramic clutch kit. I've included pictures of both sides of the clutch disk for your viewing pleasure.

#ad
Note that it is constructed with a LUK center hub. I also like the fact that the ORGANIC SIDE IS AGAINST THE FLYWHEEL. Since the pressure plate is always replaced during a clutch change and the flywheel is just resurfaced, I want to take as little off the flywheel as possible.
My truck is no monster, but it does crank out over 750 ft-lbs at the rear wheels. At 1900 rpms (peak torque for my rig) I could just begin to slip the OEM clutch in 5th and 6th gears. It would hook up again at about 2100 rpms when the torque began to drop off.
Because I only had 20K miles on my truck (and I'm very easy on clutches) I took a gamble and only purchased the clutch disk. I figured there was a good chance that my flywheel and stock pressure plate would show little, if any, wear/scarring/heat checking and that I could avoid resurfacing/replacing. Turns out I was right--the flywheel and pressure plate still had the factory machining marks over their entire surface and there was no heat checking. There was the tiniest, tiniest little spot on the pressure plate to indicate that it had been heated a bit.
We got everything back together without incident (let me tell you it's a more than a bit scary having a 360# transmission and 80# transfer case balanced on a conventional floor jack w/transmission adapter). I never want to do that again.
First impressions:
Very smooth engagement with only the slightest hint of chatter. And that chatter occurs very infrequently, and only during 2nd gear starts just as the vehicle begins to roll.
I drove it easy for about 100 mi (20mi of which was stop and go traffic) before I really poured the coal to it. I was not surprised to discover that it held beautifully. All of a sudden, driving is fun again. It's such a pain having to baby a clutch for fear of slipping it. So far this new clutch has completely eliminated any worries of clutch slippage for me. I suspect that as I get a few more miles on it that it will get even better. I believe it would make a fine towing clutch and a general all-around clutch upgrade for those who are slipping, or on the verge of slipping their OEM clutch.
My truck dyno'd just barely under 300hp on Edge's mustang dyno last summer. Since then I've upgraded my exhaust and turbine housing so I expect I'm making the tiniest hair over 300hp now. Based on how this clutch feels (admittedly this is very subjective) I'm confident that this clutch would easily hold 350hp. I'll never know since I don't have any intention of bombing it further. (OK, maybe I'll trade the EZ for a Comp someday, but not this year. )
Merry Christmas to all!
jlccc
Edited by Steve St. Laurent to remove references to competing vendor per forum guideline #5. 1


Note that it is constructed with a LUK center hub. I also like the fact that the ORGANIC SIDE IS AGAINST THE FLYWHEEL. Since the pressure plate is always replaced during a clutch change and the flywheel is just resurfaced, I want to take as little off the flywheel as possible.
My truck is no monster, but it does crank out over 750 ft-lbs at the rear wheels. At 1900 rpms (peak torque for my rig) I could just begin to slip the OEM clutch in 5th and 6th gears. It would hook up again at about 2100 rpms when the torque began to drop off.
Because I only had 20K miles on my truck (and I'm very easy on clutches) I took a gamble and only purchased the clutch disk. I figured there was a good chance that my flywheel and stock pressure plate would show little, if any, wear/scarring/heat checking and that I could avoid resurfacing/replacing. Turns out I was right--the flywheel and pressure plate still had the factory machining marks over their entire surface and there was no heat checking. There was the tiniest, tiniest little spot on the pressure plate to indicate that it had been heated a bit.
We got everything back together without incident (let me tell you it's a more than a bit scary having a 360# transmission and 80# transfer case balanced on a conventional floor jack w/transmission adapter). I never want to do that again.
First impressions:
Very smooth engagement with only the slightest hint of chatter. And that chatter occurs very infrequently, and only during 2nd gear starts just as the vehicle begins to roll.
I drove it easy for about 100 mi (20mi of which was stop and go traffic) before I really poured the coal to it. I was not surprised to discover that it held beautifully. All of a sudden, driving is fun again. It's such a pain having to baby a clutch for fear of slipping it. So far this new clutch has completely eliminated any worries of clutch slippage for me. I suspect that as I get a few more miles on it that it will get even better. I believe it would make a fine towing clutch and a general all-around clutch upgrade for those who are slipping, or on the verge of slipping their OEM clutch.
My truck dyno'd just barely under 300hp on Edge's mustang dyno last summer. Since then I've upgraded my exhaust and turbine housing so I expect I'm making the tiniest hair over 300hp now. Based on how this clutch feels (admittedly this is very subjective) I'm confident that this clutch would easily hold 350hp. I'll never know since I don't have any intention of bombing it further. (OK, maybe I'll trade the EZ for a Comp someday, but not this year. )
Merry Christmas to all!
jlccc
Edited by Steve St. Laurent to remove references to competing vendor per forum guideline #5. 1
Last edited: