It actually is giving your clutch some extra life and most people dont know it.
I must add also that running the A/C has little or no effect on engine power or the RPMs required to engage the clutch. On previous manual four bangers that I've owned the A/C nearly killed the motors and they each required intense throttle and clutch finesse to handle traffic. The Sonic handles it with the A/C on beautifully. Sorry to go off track a bit.
It actually is giving your clutch some extra life and most people dont know it.
If taking off from a stop on a hill is shortening the life of your clutch, you're doing it wrong. :sadbanana:
If taking off from a stop on a hill is shortening the life of your clutch, you're doing it wrong. :sadbanana:
Overreving and clutch dumps.
Being hard on your clutch will make it last longer. Being soft on it (which I only do when I have sensitive passengers) is the fastest way to wear it out.
^ ^ ^This will add life to your clutch.
Feathering it in won't, regardless of the computer playing god with your brakes on hills.
Being hard on your clutch will make it last longer. Being soft on it (which I only do when I have sensitive passengers) is the fastest way to wear it out.
You may be right Preloader. I've always believed the contrary. However, recent observations suggest, especially in the case of the Sonic clutch, it wants to be pushed hard!
I was fortunate in that I grew up in a transmission shop my dad owned and ran for 20+ years. I've seen him get 200k miles out of a single clutch. The faster you can get the friction disc mated to the flywheel the less it will wear.
One thing I miss about a mechanical linkage is that you can adjust it to grab clutch way down at the floor. Not only does this lessen the stress on the pressure plate, but it also takes the guess work out of finding the friction, and lessens the "feather" time.
tl;dr- dump clutch, longer life