Can a Slipping Clutch Cure Itself?

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Turbo7379
1.8 8v
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Can a Slipping Clutch Cure Itself?

Post by Turbo7379 »

Last week I was doing some gardening work for a relative. I had cut a mountain of stuff out of her overgrown garden & I had to reverse a trailer up her steep twisty gravel avenue to lift it. This involved a lot of maneuvering & riding the clutch - lady was impressed as no-one in over 40 years of her living there had been able to back a trailer right up to the front of her house! She thought I was a God when I did it a second time! :cheesy:

Unfortunately this took its toll on my clutch as it started slipping on the way home & for the next few days. Last Saturday I took a few mates to a race meeting 100 miles away. Clutch was still slipping on the way down but on the way home it was ok & hasn't slipped since! :?

Can anyone explain this? My thinking is maybe I overheated the friction plate & glazed it. Then the long drive has worn the glazing off, giving it better grip.

I'm not sure what to do now. It's a lot of work to take off the gearbox to check the clutch. But I'm heading away to a rally in 3 weeks which is a 400 mile drive away & I don't want the clutch giving up then. Any suggestions?
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Welly
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Re: Can a Slipping Clutch Cure Itself?

Post by Welly »

I've known this before, a friend of mine *completely* fried his clutch at Santa Pod (think smoke billowing from under bonnet) and lost all drive - it was like there was no clutch in there at all :shock:

Later, as we all considered what to do about it, the clutch had cooled down and was working again :?

I think all you can do is treat it well and take your time with it, if it's working ok now then it should be ok really :|
Cars in my care:
2021 Kia Spottage 1.6 Pez Turbo Dual Clutch Gearbox Trickery
2013 Renner Twingo - donkey work
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Doggy
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Re: Can a Slipping Clutch Cure Itself?

Post by Doggy »

I agree with welly, :shock:

.....if it ain't broke, don't fix it.

For peace of mind, I would be tempted to use it noramlly for a week or two, (to complete the process of de-glazing), then try to provoke slip by flooring the accelerator at aroung maximum torque revs, while climbing a hill in 4th or 5th. It if doesn't slip then, it's not likely to when treated a little more sympathetically in normal use.
2002 HDi 2.2 Exec Estate, (2008-12) (wonderful)
2003 HDi 2.2 6-speed Exec Estate (2012-19) (also a gem)
2009 Citroen C5 2.0 HDi VTR+ Estate (godawful heap)
2008 BMW E91 330i touring (great fun - murdered by a reversing SUV)
2007 BMW E91 325i touring (slower smoother quieter)
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