SHOTIME 37psi
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Well how much does it cost in labor to put a clutch in a 1994 Taurus SHO? Where should I buy my clutch from? Will a stock clutch be okay in my car with the upgrades I have listed below or do I need to upgrade?
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I remember your disk. It was obviously defective, its not like you toasted after only 3000 miles of driving. The friction disk had actually broken in two. FYI I have never had problems with the stock friction disk. You may want to invest in a Ceramic TOB from www.shonutperformance.com though.91taurisho said:if you drive your car hard, stay away from those clutches! Take my advice, I drive my cars hard and I toasted one of them after about 3,000 miles. Yes, I was easy on it for about 2,500 miles till it was fully broken in.
Yes, but As far as I have heard, it has happened to other people. Not as bad as mine but similar things have happened. I also broke the pressure plate, not just the disc. I will never agree with anyone getting a stock clutch on one of these cars unless they never abuse it. That's my personal opinion and you don't have to agree with it.smithsil said:I remember your disk. It was obviously defective, its not like you toasted after only 3000 miles of driving. The friction disk had actually broken in two. FYI I have never had problems with the stock friction disk. You may want to invest in a Ceramic TOB from www.shonutperformance.com though.
FYI all of the aftermarket clutches use the same OEM pressure plate and just beef it up with bigger rivets and straps and whatnot. The finger wear you had on your stocker would of happened with any pressure plate. I think that was more of a TOB problem anyway. That was insane finger wear for only 3000 miles.91taurisho said:Yes, but As far as I have heard, it has happened to other people. Not as bad as mine but similar things have happened. I also broke the pressure plate, not just the disc. I will never agree with anyone getting a stock clutch on one of these cars unless they never abuse it. That's my personal opinion and you don't have to agree with it.![]()
I agree with that to an extent. The insane finger wear part, I definately agree with though! I know all clutches (for us anyway) use the same oem pressure plute, but I don't think it was JUST a TOB problem. I think it had a lot to do with the very hard driving it incurred. There is nothing wrong with driving hard, I just don't recommend doing it on a stock clutch.smithsil said:FYI all of the aftermarket clutches use the same OEM pressure plate and just beef it up with bigger rivets and straps and whatnot. The finger wear you had on your stocker would of happened with any pressure plate. I think that was more of a TOB problem anyway. That was insane finger wear for only 3000 miles.
I agree with that to an extent. The insane finger wear part, I definately agree with though! I know all clutches (for us anyway) use the same oem pressure plute, but I don't think it was JUST a TOB problem. I think it had a lot to do with the very hard driving it incurred. There is nothing wrong with driving hard, I just don't recommend doing it on a stock clutch.
Also like I said, if youShoaz said:I think it's pretty easy to surmise from this thread that if you don't intend to grossly abuse your car a stock clutch is fine.
if you drive your car hard, stay away from those clutches!
I will never agree with anyone getting a stock clutch on one of these cars unless they never abuse it
91taurisho said:I'm glad you agree with me...![]()
Should'nt you be worried more about the disk, since that was the part that failed?91taurisho said:Shoaz, Bizzy, Like I also said, it's too much of a hit or miss for me. I've seen it go both ways but for my troubles, I'll go with something a little better than stock. A stock clutch with Bolts and heavy duty straps on the PP(as opposed to the rivets and straps) would be a WAY better choice than a stock clutch from napa/AZ/wherever. The clutches from NAPA/autozone/wherever have the same pressure plate as oem, no bolts, just rivets. This is why I say stay away from those clutches. If it were one with bolts and HD straps, I would be less likely to say it(hence the reason I recommend the southbend stock replacement kitsame as stock but bolts & HD straps). It's more the fact of the stock PP, not the disc. Aftermarket PP's are the same except for the straps and rivets. Again, this is my PERSONAL OPINION! That's the great thing about it, everyone has a different opinion...
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No, Because I think it had a lot to do with the PP straps and rivets. [QUOTE/]
Like Shoaz pointed out, the straps have nothing to do with clamp load.
They replace the straps with HD pieces that provide more clamping force. I think it was the lack of clamping force that HELPED cause the premature failure. [QUOTE/]
The stock PP provides 1900 lb. of clamping force which is more than enough for most N/A applications; this is NOT the issue here. Can you please explain to me how the lack of clamping force (there was no lack, but) HELPED cause premature failure? I would be thinking just the opposite...