Off Road SHO
Moderator
That is somewhat true. The clutch alignment tool is just to get the disc hole near the center of the tranny's main shaft axis. It doesn't guarranty that the spline notches will be lined up, and when you're bolting the pressure plate to the flywheel the clutch is "let out", that is, it's clamped. Harder than heck to rotate the disc now.
So what you do is put the tranny in a gear to make it more difficult for its' gears to rotate. Then put a 3/4" or 19mm socket and breaker bar on the front of the crank and turn it clockwise a little. The splines will line right up and the shaft will go right in.
Tom
So what you do is put the tranny in a gear to make it more difficult for its' gears to rotate. Then put a 3/4" or 19mm socket and breaker bar on the front of the crank and turn it clockwise a little. The splines will line right up and the shaft will go right in.
Tom
operdot said:Thats a realyl great idea, but what i have found out in a few clutch jobs recently is that even with a clutch alignment tool the clutch doesnt get perfectly centered, what i used was a digital caliper that measured to 1000th of an inch. I guess i'm a little percistent because i have read that the clutch aligns itself automatically at the first startupis this true?
is this true?




