I'll have to disagree with this. If the throw out bearing was turning anytime the engine is, the bearing would not last 50K miles, probably not even 25K. It has no lube except the grease you put in it. Just like the pilot bearing.
BIGPAPA,
Can you post a picture of the clutch bearing and fork return spring or system that creates the freeplay?
A bit more detail.
The slave cylinder has a spring in behind the piston body pushing from the housing or casting. It pushes the fork forward and applies a preload to the bearing. The bearing turns continously. The hydraulic system is at ZERO PSI with your foot off of the pedal. When you push on the pedal, the master cylinder closes a valve (incoming fluid supply) and creates pressure, the slave cylinder pushes forward and we get release travel.
To demonstrate on you own, next time someone has a trans out (with bellhousing if NV4500) install the bearing and fork then install only the slave cylinder from an old system, no fluid, no line, no master, just the slv cyl bolted up.
Now, try to push the bearing back in to its mid point of the travel range, feel the resistance, thats the proload.
Or with the clutch and trans installed, take a used slv cyl (retaining straps already snapped) and try to install it. You have to push it into position and hold it while you bolt it up. Why, its not the fluid, that peacefully just changed location and went to the reservoir. You're compressing the spring inside the slv cyl.
Simpler demonstration, find an internal slave cylinder from a Ranger or 96- Chevy C/K series. Make sure it doesn't have any fluid in it and leave the bleed screw open. Now compress the bearing back against the housing, feel the spring? There is a spring behind the bearing that applies a constant preload to the system.
Bearing design used to REQUIRE freeplay. Freeplay was an actual air gap between the bearing face and the levers or later fingers that allowed the bearing to NOT TURN with your foot off ot the pedal. The bearing of choice was a thrust bearing or aka step shell by some folks. Great for a direct inline with the input shaft load, but at high RPM the ball bearing actually want to fling out and cause wear internally. The current bearing design of choice is called angular contact. The load thru the ball is at about a 45 deg angle, so it does just fine with thrust or radial loads. Combine angular contact with self aligning and actuate with a hydraulic system and that is todays clutch release system.
Why the long answer? Not to disprove BIGPAPA's statement, but just an attempt to offer the inner workings of the system to help other diagnoise the problem. We (the clutch industry) have seen a lot of clutches blamed when the problem was elsewhere and the next clutch installation they either got lucky or learned from the previous failed installation.
I take a bunch of tech calls, my US record for most NV5600 R&R clutch fix attempts on one truck trying to get it to release... ... ... ... drum roll please... ... ... .
14 R&R's back to back, one tech, one truck, untold lets try THIS BRILLIANT idea!!!!!!!! next. Then contact the supplier, he's our best account, we gotta , oh never mind.