absolutely thank you, I'm a well knowledgeable mechanic and I couldn't find a single thing on how the clutch brake works in this hydro system. do wish you explained how to remove it
Bring back the mechanical clutch linkage , they are foolproof . Hydraulic clutches have too many parts and have high failure rates compared to mechanical linkage . A self adjusting clutch is used with the hydraulic system . They are expensive to maintain . 7/28/23
@@G-AND-A-PRESS-PLAY two ways you can try: 1. Hold the clutch pedal down (you’ll need someone to help or a pedal depressor). While the pedal is pressed down, push the “wear indicator tab” on the face of the clutch all the way back to the “new” position. Release the pedal and pump the pedal several times. See if that adjusts that gap. 2. If it doesn’t adjust that way, you can do the same procedure except, after you push the wear tab all the way back up to the new position and release the pedal, you can hold a spacer (something metal about a 1/4 - 1/2 inch thick) in between the throw out bearing and clutch brake before pumping the pedal again. Sometimes that spacer will cause the clutch to adjust and remove that space. Something else you may want to check is the hydraulic system. Pump the pedal several times to build pressure in the hydraulic system. If the gap between the throw out bearing and clutch brake gets smaller or goes away completely that means something is leaking in the hydraulic system causing you to lose pressure not allowing the pedal to push the forks as far as they should go. If that’s the case I would check the slave cylinder.
Tony your very calm and informative way of explaining things is great. Thanks a lot
Very calm talking with so much knowledge and very easy language his using to clarify clutch problems , thank you much
Gonna check out ol bessie tomorrow.. Thanks, very informative
Right on, great description. Thank you.
Thank you for that video it really help me
So much good information. Will check it out. I hope it's just the clutch brake. Problems just started yesterday getting it into gear during take off.
Clutch brake is likely 👍
Best explanation
absolutely thank you, I'm a well knowledgeable mechanic and I couldn't find a single thing on how the clutch brake works in this hydro system. do wish you explained how to remove it
That specific one you have to remove the clutch to slide it off.
Thank you, great info
Great vid, will give mine a check ✅
Excellent congratulations
Very informative video
Great video thanks man
Thanks for the information but it would be nice if you used a pointing stick or your finger to show us what your looking at.
@@servando1049 yea I thought about that after watching the video again. If you have a question let me know. I’ll try to answer it for you.
Thank you
Please make more videos.❤
Thank you for the helpful video , my truck started when i bypasses the clutch switch but wont go in gear what could be the problem ?
Bring back the mechanical clutch linkage , they are foolproof . Hydraulic clutches have too many parts and have high failure rates compared to mechanical linkage . A self adjusting clutch is used with the hydraulic system . They are expensive to maintain . 7/28/23
How do you adjust the gap between the clutch brake and the throw out bearing?
Is it a self adjusting hydraulic clutch?
@@alreyindustries yes. Hydraulic clutch, replaced master and slave cylinder and I’m lost.
@@G-AND-A-PRESS-PLAY two ways you can try:
1. Hold the clutch pedal down (you’ll need someone to help or a pedal depressor).
While the pedal is pressed down, push the “wear indicator tab” on the face of the clutch all the way back to the “new” position.
Release the pedal and pump the pedal several times. See if that adjusts that gap.
2. If it doesn’t adjust that way, you can do the same procedure except, after you push the wear tab all the way back up to the new position and release the pedal, you can hold a spacer (something metal about a 1/4 - 1/2 inch thick) in between the throw out bearing and clutch brake before pumping the pedal again. Sometimes that spacer will cause the clutch to adjust and remove that space.
Something else you may want to check is the hydraulic system. Pump the pedal several times to build pressure in the hydraulic system. If the gap between the throw out bearing and clutch brake gets smaller or goes away completely that means something is leaking in the hydraulic system causing you to lose pressure not allowing the pedal to push the forks as far as they should go. If that’s the case I would check the slave cylinder.
@@alreyindustries clutch is brand new also. The tab is in the new position.
Does a 2004 freightliner columbia 10 speed have a master cylinder
I’m not sure. If you have a hydraulic clutch you have a master cylinder. If you have a mechanical clutch, you do not.
You need a clutch brake
The clutch doesn't grind going into gear, it would be the transmission.