Tmoose
Mechanical
- Apr 12, 2003
- 5,626
A friend has a mostly original 1976 Corvette.
In a Motorcycle Safety Foundation course he took, their preference was when at a light stay in first gear and hold in the clutch.
I've seen a few cranks with deeply worn thrust faces of mixed makes.
The modern bearing manufacturers make a big deal about the improved profile they use today on thrust bearings to prevent wear.
Is he taking much of a chance of shortening the crank thrust bearing life (not the throw out bearings) holding depressing the clutch?
He will be replacing the original clutch with a centerforce unit in a few weeks, and I will lend them my dial indicator to check existing crank endplay, among other things.
In a Motorcycle Safety Foundation course he took, their preference was when at a light stay in first gear and hold in the clutch.
I've seen a few cranks with deeply worn thrust faces of mixed makes.
The modern bearing manufacturers make a big deal about the improved profile they use today on thrust bearings to prevent wear.
Is he taking much of a chance of shortening the crank thrust bearing life (not the throw out bearings) holding depressing the clutch?
He will be replacing the original clutch with a centerforce unit in a few weeks, and I will lend them my dial indicator to check existing crank endplay, among other things.