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Thread: How far can you go on one clutch?

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    How far can you go on one clutch?

    Here's today's question: (and I know it does not have anything like a straight answer). Daisy has 197K km on her clock and is still running on her original clutch. She has led a pampered, Tarmac centred life and has probably clocked up only 10,000km towing a 500kg trailer. We are hearing the various clatterings from the clutch when I press the pedal and the car is cold but it's still working. I have priced up a clutch and flywheel kit from Craddocks. How much borrowed time do we reckon I have left before I spend a weekend on my back?

  2. #2
    Roverlord off road spares is offline AT REST
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    Quote Originally Posted by Daisy Driver View Post
    Here's today's question: (and I know it does not have anything like a straight answer). Daisy has 197K km on her clock and is still running on her original clutch. She has led a pampered, Tarmac centred life and has probably clocked up only 10,000km towing a 500kg trailer. We are hearing the various clatterings from the clutch when I press the pedal and the car is cold but it's still working. I have priced up a clutch and flywheel kit from Craddocks. How much borrowed time do we reckon I have left before I spend a weekend on my back?
    could also be just the throw out bearing


  3. #3
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    pretty much the same amount of work to change it though, may as well do the lot while it is all apart

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    It's really hard to know. I used to work in a garage that specialized in Japanese cars, and I've seen identical models go through them in drastically different mileage. I've seen a 1990 year model Honda Accord go over 300,000 miles (about 480,000 km) and not yet need a clutch (first 120,000 miles were by a traveling salesman where it almost exclusively stayed in high gear for hours at a time) and I've seen the same year car need one at 100,000 miles, though it was probably abused.

  5. #5
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    My Dearly Departed Mazda 626 (imported LPG Capella) did over 417,000 km on its original. - Was in perfect condition when crashed, despite the last 20K driven by a known 'clutch-rider' (#2 son)
    - Wife and I did the rest, all city-commuting driving with a handful of 200+km trips.

    Driven properly, I'd expect 250 to 350K minimum, 400+ would be nice....

  6. #6
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    FWIW, I had the spigot bearing grinding when cold, esp in reverse. Got worse, then to the point that I had to let the revs drop to idle before downshifting during spirited driving. I was nursing it as it was just a daily driver until I got around to the service.

    Then all of a sudden it's back to normal - no extra noise, nothing.

  7. #7
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    I had the clutch replaced in my 300tdi Defender replaced at 280 000km when I had the gb & tc recon'd. Had no problems with it at the time, just decided to get it done with everything else.
    Unfortunately I totalled it 3 months later
    So now I am the proud owner of a D2

  8. #8
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    Thats pretty good llife. The throw out bearing is usually the first to go. Unlike the cars above they cop abuse from off-road use including dust mud water . It doesn't help to sit stationary with the clutch in all the time either

  9. #9
    Lrdriver Guest
    i have a d2with 318000km on the clutch but is getting a bit s/hand now but been like that last 100k ish, better change it sooner than latter i think

  10. #10
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    1994 Falcon XR8 Sprint did the best part of 360,000km+ on what appeared to be the original clutch, no listing of a clutch replacement in its service history, and thoroughly abused for the last 120,000km+ of its life... replaced it because it was slipping, suspect it had more to do with contamination and a stretched clutch cable than anything else.... if it wasnt for oil leaking from the flywheel bolts, it looked good enough to go back together....

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