Our trucks have an automatic slack adjuster (for lack of a better name) the hydro system does not do the adjusting like other trucks. It gets a bit tight right before it is about to adjust so as you've noticed all the free play will dissapear you'l think that the clutch is about to give out then it will adjust and all is normal again. I've had this happen a few times it seems that if you make a habbit to "hit the floor" with the peddel each time you shift it will adjust sooner and if you don't it takes longer. I've got 117800 miles on my clutch with no signs of slippage. And I do alot of towing but it's mostly highway except for those cliff like boat launch ramps up north. Hope this info helps.
I disagree. I have worked on NV4500, NV5600 and a lot of G56 hydraulic systems. None of them have an automatic slack adjuster
mechanism. The only automatic adjustment where something actually happens is in the G56 Original Equipment design self adjusting clutch. Possibly a better analogy is do you have any adjustment on disc brake hydraulics?
Our hydraulic systems and clutches do not have any clutch release bearing freeplay. The closest that we have is about 1/8" of
master cylinder pushrod play before the M/C starts creating hydraulic pressure and actuating the slave cylinder. We have a spring in the S/C that pushes on the fork 24X7X365 creating a preload against the bearing, it turns all the time that the engine is turning.
I'm only offering this to help diagnosis clutch problems. We get frustrated at work because most techs assume systems are working correctly and are reluctant to perform a simple test that will tell quite a story in just a few minutes. Clutches, release systems and especially hydraulics DO NOT set CEL's and too frequently old school thinking "freeplay" creeps into the diagnosis of todays constant contact release systems.
Those of you that have ever worked on a Ford Ranger with the internal clutch slave cylinder and had problems bleeding them have been down that road of frustration and lost hours.
Ryan,
The industry seems to have adopted hydraulics as the preferred tool for release systems. Easy routing of lines, no need to worry about the cable path being smoothly routed. By using a Concentric Slave Cylinder (CSC) the friction of the fork and the bearing rubbing on a front bearing retainer guide tube is eliminated by a straight pushing CSC piston pressing on a release bearing. But the first hand info involves the 5. 0L Mustang self adjusting cable. The wire wears into the jackets, EXTRA friction, hard pedal, difficult to reset to new position can occur during R&R, system keeps changing as it creates a new cable path in the jacket, one very popular aftermarket option for the 5. 0L Mustang is a manual adjusting quadrant and cable to eliminate the troublesome self adjusting design.
Hydraulics, low friction, easy routing and packaging, generally long service life and if you understand bleeding procedures, easy to service.
I have assembled (many times) a dry master cylinder, line and slave cylinder and in a bench bleeding procedure bled and tested the system as a ready to install in the truck in about 6 minutes. Using only the fluid required to fill the system, no wasted DOT 3.
We have become reliant on CEL's and the codes, but we don't get them on these systems, need to use basic system knowledge, observation skills and sound practices to repair these systems.