Discussion
Hello all.
After an absence from working on the car and frequenting here, I'm back at it. Still no clutch though. I HAD put the slave on upside down (which meant bleeding it was never going to be 100%) but I've put that right. There was air in the system but I've bled that out. But still no gear will engage.
Strangely, when the car is not running, it will go into all the gears. But as soon as I start her up and she's running, nothing. Will not go into any gear.
Any suggestions chaps? Starting to wish I'd never taken this amount of work on now.... There is a mountain of bodywork to do
Cheers
Cad
After an absence from working on the car and frequenting here, I'm back at it. Still no clutch though. I HAD put the slave on upside down (which meant bleeding it was never going to be 100%) but I've put that right. There was air in the system but I've bled that out. But still no gear will engage.
Strangely, when the car is not running, it will go into all the gears. But as soon as I start her up and she's running, nothing. Will not go into any gear.
Any suggestions chaps? Starting to wish I'd never taken this amount of work on now.... There is a mountain of bodywork to do

Cheers
Cad
With someone pressing the clutch pedal down, look at the slave and see if it is travelling its full length. If it is not then either there is air in the system or the master cylinder is not giving the required pressure. Sometimes the seals in master cylinders lose their effectiveness when the pressure has been released for some time (as in your rebuild). Try pumping the pedal very quickly 5 or 6 times and see if there is any pedal resistance. You may just get a little at the bottom of the pedal but it will rapidly diminish so you would need to pump 5 times again and so on. Again this could be either air in the system or the master cylinder seals are weak.
If it is mechanical, then either the clutch plate is the wrong way round - the flatter side goes towards the flywheel with the springs on the gearbox side - or the clutch release arm is incorrectly located or bent/damaged. You would see this via the inspection hole on the bottom of the housing.
One other possible is the clutch plate is stuck to the flywheel often called a frozen clutch. Jack up the rear end - follow all safety precautions - axle stands, chocks etc then sit in the car. Press the clutch pedal right down and keep it down. Start the engine with 4th gear selected. The rear wheels will start spinning and with the revs around 1200-1500 gently press the brake pedal on and off with your right foot..This should free it off.
If it is mechanical, then either the clutch plate is the wrong way round - the flatter side goes towards the flywheel with the springs on the gearbox side - or the clutch release arm is incorrectly located or bent/damaged. You would see this via the inspection hole on the bottom of the housing.
One other possible is the clutch plate is stuck to the flywheel often called a frozen clutch. Jack up the rear end - follow all safety precautions - axle stands, chocks etc then sit in the car. Press the clutch pedal right down and keep it down. Start the engine with 4th gear selected. The rear wheels will start spinning and with the revs around 1200-1500 gently press the brake pedal on and off with your right foot..This should free it off.
N7GTX said:
With someone pressing the clutch pedal down, look at the slave and see if it is travelling its full length. If it is not then either there is air in the system or the master cylinder is not giving the required pressure. Sometimes the seals in master cylinders lose their effectiveness when the pressure has been released for some time (as in your rebuild). Try pumping the pedal very quickly 5 or 6 times and see if there is any pedal resistance. You may just get a little at the bottom of the pedal but it will rapidly diminish so you would need to pump 5 times again and so on. Again this could be either air in the system or the master cylinder seals are weak.
If it is mechanical, then either the clutch plate is the wrong way round - the flatter side goes towards the flywheel with the springs on the gearbox side - or the clutch release arm is incorrectly located or bent/damaged. You would see this via the inspection hole on the bottom of the housing.
One other possible is the clutch plate is stuck to the flywheel often called a frozen clutch. Jack up the rear end - follow all safety precautions - axle stands, chocks etc then sit in the car. Press the clutch pedal right down and keep it down. Start the engine with 4th gear selected. The rear wheels will start spinning and with the revs around 1200-1500 gently press the brake pedal on and off with your right foot..This should free it off.
The master cylinder is brand new. As is the copper/cupro pipe from it to the bulkhead block.If it is mechanical, then either the clutch plate is the wrong way round - the flatter side goes towards the flywheel with the springs on the gearbox side - or the clutch release arm is incorrectly located or bent/damaged. You would see this via the inspection hole on the bottom of the housing.
One other possible is the clutch plate is stuck to the flywheel often called a frozen clutch. Jack up the rear end - follow all safety precautions - axle stands, chocks etc then sit in the car. Press the clutch pedal right down and keep it down. Start the engine with 4th gear selected. The rear wheels will start spinning and with the revs around 1200-1500 gently press the brake pedal on and off with your right foot..This should free it off.
Will try the pedal pump during the week, also the frozen clutch remedy. Thanks for the info Iain. I'll take some pics through the inspection hole during the week. Maybe something will stand out that I've missed.
Sorry, don't have any TVR knowledge, but here's something I learned last week.
We had a Triumph Vitesse in for a new slave cylinder. Fitting was one of the easiest I've ever had to do - literally a 5 minute job - but the system wouldn't bleed. We use a pressure bleeder - a container under pressure, filled with brake fluid with a cap that replaces the normal cap on the master cylinder. I've never known it not to work.
Phoned a mate who suggested "reverse" bleeding - pumping fluid up through the bleed nipple on the slave cylinder - and it worked first time.
Maybe worth a try?
We had a Triumph Vitesse in for a new slave cylinder. Fitting was one of the easiest I've ever had to do - literally a 5 minute job - but the system wouldn't bleed. We use a pressure bleeder - a container under pressure, filled with brake fluid with a cap that replaces the normal cap on the master cylinder. I've never known it not to work.
Phoned a mate who suggested "reverse" bleeding - pumping fluid up through the bleed nipple on the slave cylinder - and it worked first time.
Maybe worth a try?
N7GTX said:
One other possible is the clutch plate is stuck to the flywheel often called a frozen clutch. Jack up the rear end - follow all safety precautions - axle stands, chocks etc then sit in the car. Press the clutch pedal right down and keep it down. Start the engine with 4th gear selected. The rear wheels will start spinning and with the revs around 1200-1500 gently press the brake pedal on and off with your right foot..This should free it off.

Worked a treat. Thanks Iain
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A cheap fix and with all your rebuild woes, good to get a result. Just need some pics when the car is done and back on the road 