This is concerning, I always thought the CMIII was bulletproof, as my original lasted 55k miles with no problems. Got a single plate CMIII on the shelf, so it is no good eh?
I didn't say that, lol. Only that the single heavy spring units are discontinued. I think they were having supplier issues, so they went back to making the DD setups with two stock springs they can get when they need them.
The single plate CMIII's that I'm referring to have a MUCH thicker spring than stock. If you got a single plate CMIII with a normal thickness stock spring, then someone messed up the order, either placing the order or filling it. There are two versions of the CMIII for the SHO - a single stock spring version with a modified plate with the segmented Kevlar lining (which we don't sell), and a 'heavy duty' spring version, modified plate, which is either a double stock spring (which is what we sell) or (briefly) a single heavy spring, also with the segmented Kevlar lining.
According to Garu, Kevlar needs a LOT of clamping pressure to work properly, and we have no reason to dispute that, so in our opinion, the Kevlar discs need the double diaphram plate (or the heavy single spring ones).
We've never really liked Kevlar ourselves, as the pressure plate tends to get warped with them (and the double diaphram plate needs to have the plate thinned to account for the second spring, which makes the plate easier to warp). Our home-brew double diaphram + Fibretuff ones don't warp the plate, but they are just too damn chattery, so that's why we want to try an organic disc under the double diaphram plate next. Of course until we find a proven combo, we can't offer what we do for sale, so we sell the standard CMIII with a double diaphram plate and the segmented Kevlar disc, for which we've heard few complaints about until recently.