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#1
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Not shifting
I know this is a miata group, but hope someone can help.
I am having problems shifting in my car. 1994 Mazda Protege 194,000 miles 1.8 Liter Manual Transmission It runs fine when I can get it into gear. (No slippage) When I push down on the clutch the pressure doesn't feel right. My Chilton Manual doesn't have any diagnostics but it did have sections showing replacement of the master clutch cylinder and clutch release(slave) cylinder. Thanks for any input. |
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#2
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In article <433cc3a5.6c4.41@news2>, "Andy Kennedy" wrote:
> It runs fine when I can get it into gear. (No slippage) > When I push down on the clutch the pressure doesn't feel > right. Check the fluid level in the clutch master cylinder reservoir. If it's low (possibly VERY low), peel back the rubber boot from the slave cylinder; if there's fluid in there, rebuild or replace the clutch slave cylinder. This is very common in Miatas and cheap to fix. A rebuild kit is under $10 and easy to install. A new Miata slave cylinder is around $60. To lengthen the service life of the slave cylinder, flush the system every year or two. --- Lanny Chambers '94C, St. Louis http://www.hummingbirds.net/alignment.html |
#3
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> In article <433cc3a5.6c4.41@news2>, "Andy Kennedy" wrote:
> > > It runs fine when I can get it into gear. (No slippage) > > When I push down on the clutch the pressure doesn't feel > > right. > > Check the fluid level in the clutch master cylinder > reservoir. If it's low (possibly VERY low), peel back the > rubber boot from the slave cylinder; if there's fluid in > there, rebuild or replace the clutch slave cylinder. > > This is very common in Miatas and cheap to fix. A rebuild > kit is under $10 and easy to install. A new Miata slave > cylinder is around $60. > To lengthen the service life of the slave cylinder, flush > the system every year or two. >t.html Thanks. My car has a line going from the master brake cylinder to the clutch master cylinder and then it goes to the slave cylinder. I suppose the clutch cylinder and/or slave cylinder may need rebuilding or replacement. The brake fluid level is fine. |
#4
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"Andy Kennedy" wrote:
>> In article <433cc3a5.6c4.41@news2>, "Andy Kennedy" wrote: >> >> > It runs fine when I can get it into gear. (No slippage) >> > When I push down on the clutch the pressure doesn't feel >> > right. >> >> Check the fluid level in the clutch master cylinder >> reservoir. If it's low (possibly VERY low), peel back the >> rubber boot from the slave cylinder; if there's fluid in >> there, rebuild or replace the clutch slave cylinder. >> >> This is very common in Miatas and cheap to fix. A rebuild >> kit is under $10 and easy to install. A new Miata slave >> cylinder is around $60. >> To lengthen the service life of the slave cylinder, flush >> the system every year or two. >>t.html > >Thanks. > >My car has a line going from the master brake cylinder to >the clutch master cylinder and then it goes to the slave >cylinder. I suppose the clutch cylinder and/or slave >cylinder may need rebuilding or replacement. The brake >fluid level is fine. I don't understand. You are saying the brake and clutch use the same fluid? Is that even possible? I cannot imagine how. The Miata and all other cars I know have separate hydraulics. On the Miata, the reservoir for topping up the clutch fluid tends to get a black wall where the fluid used to be. The only way to check the fluid level confidently is to take off the cap and look inside. For some reason this does not happen to the brake fluid reservoir. I assume the reason is fear of law suits. Leon -- Leon van Dommelen Bozo, the White 96 Sebring Miata .) http://www.dommelen.net/miata EXIT THE INTERSTATES (Jamie Jensen) |
#5
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yes the clutch and brake fluid share the same resevoir on the proteges. if
no fluid leaks suspect warn clutch try bleeding the lines to the slave cylinder that would be my first step. "Leon van Dommelen" > wrote in message ... > "Andy Kennedy" wrote: > >>> In article <433cc3a5.6c4.41@news2>, "Andy Kennedy" wrote: >>> >>> > It runs fine when I can get it into gear. (No slippage) >>> > When I push down on the clutch the pressure doesn't feel >>> > right. >>> >>> Check the fluid level in the clutch master cylinder >>> reservoir. If it's low (possibly VERY low), peel back the >>> rubber boot from the slave cylinder; if there's fluid in >>> there, rebuild or replace the clutch slave cylinder. >>> >>> This is very common in Miatas and cheap to fix. A rebuild >>> kit is under $10 and easy to install. A new Miata slave >>> cylinder is around $60. >>> To lengthen the service life of the slave cylinder, flush >>> the system every year or two. >>>t.html >> >>Thanks. >> >>My car has a line going from the master brake cylinder to >>the clutch master cylinder and then it goes to the slave >>cylinder. I suppose the clutch cylinder and/or slave >>cylinder may need rebuilding or replacement. The brake >>fluid level is fine. > > I don't understand. You are saying the brake and clutch use the > same fluid? Is that even possible? I cannot imagine how. > > The Miata and all other cars I know have separate hydraulics. > On the Miata, the reservoir for topping up the clutch fluid > tends to get a black wall where the fluid used to be. The only way > to check the fluid level confidently is to take off the cap and > look inside. > > For some reason this does not happen to the brake fluid reservoir. > I assume the reason is fear of law suits. > > Leon > -- > Leon van Dommelen Bozo, the White 96 Sebring Miata .) > http://www.dommelen.net/miata > EXIT THE INTERSTATES (Jamie Jensen) |
#6
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> yes the clutch and brake fluid share the same resevoir on
> the proteges. if no fluid leaks suspect warn clutch try > bleeding the lines to the slave cylinder that would be my Replacing the clutch master and slave cylinder solved the problem. Bleeding the lines took longer than expected. Though there was no more bubbles present, the clutch pedal "stiffness" wasn't like before. I decided to drive the car and it shifted fine and the pressure returned. I think it needed the work of the booster which required the car being on. |
#7
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What did that cost you, parts and labor?
<Andy Kennedy> wrote in message news:43422b17.630.41@news2... > > yes the clutch and brake fluid share the same resevoir on > > the proteges. if no fluid leaks suspect warn clutch try > > bleeding the lines to the slave cylinder that would be my > > Replacing the clutch master and slave cylinder solved the > problem. > > Bleeding the lines took longer than expected. Though there > was no more bubbles present, the clutch pedal "stiffness" > wasn't like before. > > I decided to drive the car and it shifted fine and the > pressure returned. > I think it needed the work of the booster which required the > car being > on. |
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