Noticed a subtle grinding noise in the cab. It's fairly subtle, I have to turn the volume down on the radio in order to hear it. I found a similar thread but it had no resolution What I've determined so far:
At a dead stop in neutral, such as at start up:
Clutch released (pedal down, engine running) no noise.
Engage the clutch, noise starts.
Release the clutch, noise slows to a stop.
Coming to a stop:
In gear, clutch released, noise slows to a stop with vehicle.
In neutral, clutch released, vehicle usually stops first then noise slows to a stop.
In neutral, clutch engaged, noise continues even while vehicle stops until clutch is released to shift into gear.
Cold seems to increase the noise, it wasn't until last fall when the temperatures came down that I noticed it. When I first start out on a cold morning I can really hear it. After the engine's been up to normal operating temperature for a while I can still hear it but it sounds noticeably quieter. In fact after I first noticed it, it went away for a while but that was probably when we had a warm streak in the 70s.
It's an '06 with 29,400 miles, some (<1000 miles) towing a 9k 5th wheel. At lights I don't sit with my foot on the clutch, in fact that's probably why I heard it because I sit with the clutch engaged at the light.
Since day 1 it's always been harder shifting when cold but not hard if you know what I mean. Even before I noticed the noise I was thinking on going with a synthetic ATF-4 (amsoil) to see it that's makes a difference in the cold. Now I'm wondering if that would help this or if I really have something mechanically wrong.
At a dead stop in neutral, such as at start up:
Clutch released (pedal down, engine running) no noise.
Engage the clutch, noise starts.
Release the clutch, noise slows to a stop.
Coming to a stop:
In gear, clutch released, noise slows to a stop with vehicle.
In neutral, clutch released, vehicle usually stops first then noise slows to a stop.
In neutral, clutch engaged, noise continues even while vehicle stops until clutch is released to shift into gear.
Cold seems to increase the noise, it wasn't until last fall when the temperatures came down that I noticed it. When I first start out on a cold morning I can really hear it. After the engine's been up to normal operating temperature for a while I can still hear it but it sounds noticeably quieter. In fact after I first noticed it, it went away for a while but that was probably when we had a warm streak in the 70s.
It's an '06 with 29,400 miles, some (<1000 miles) towing a 9k 5th wheel. At lights I don't sit with my foot on the clutch, in fact that's probably why I heard it because I sit with the clutch engaged at the light.
Since day 1 it's always been harder shifting when cold but not hard if you know what I mean. Even before I noticed the noise I was thinking on going with a synthetic ATF-4 (amsoil) to see it that's makes a difference in the cold. Now I'm wondering if that would help this or if I really have something mechanically wrong.