fairlight08 wrote:hi guy's another problem has hit the fan lol does anyone know much about the clutch on the v6 engine?
i went to drive her for the frist time the other day and put my foot on the clutch and the pedal didnt come back up i know they are hydro on these engines so do i need to bleed it?

Funny you should mention it...
If it's a sealed system (as on the D8) with a black reservoir on the bulkhead behind the cambelt area, you need a complete new system. Easy enough to transplant from another car - the cylinders just come out by pushing in (hard) and twisting anticlockwise (hard)
If it's a D9 with the clutch sharing the brake reservoir, the first thing is to check the slave cylinder on top of the gearbox housing (take the air filter box out). If there's any wetness around there you'll probably need a new slave cylinder (£20). Check the master cylinder buried in the bulkhead behind the engine too.
To bleed:
Get a brake bleed kit from Halfords. The type with a pipe and a one-way valve. Park the car with the nearside (passenger) front corner raised MUCH higher than anything else. Jack the corner up if necessary. Pull the rubber cap off the bleed nipple at the end of the slave cylinder (don't forget to replace it after) and attach the pipe. Stick the other end in a bottle. From memory you'll need a 10mm and 7mm open-ended spanners to fit the nuts on the slave cylinder. Hold the bigger one still and open the smaller one at least half a turn. You may end up with brake fluid on your hands here. Nasty stuff. I recommend latex gloves in retrospect...
With the bleed nut loosened, make sure the brake fluid reservoir is to the brim. Jiggle the reservoir if necessary to get any trapped air out. Pump the clutch with your hand 5 times. No more. Try to push it down quickly and pull it up slowly. Refill the reservoir. Repeat until you've passed at least half a pint into the bottle.
Tighten up the bleed nipple and pump the clutch (you should be able to do it with your foot now) lots - around 50 times. It should firm up around 20 pumps in... If it still sinks, you need a new master cylinder.
Replacing a cylinder is easy. The high pressure pipe (the metal one) is held in by a little metal clip you just need to prise out about 1/4" then you can ease the pipe out.
<steve_earwig> I think this forum is more about keeping our cars going with minimal outlay than giving our cars more reason to go bang