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Juicing the clutch

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by dakotajayne, Jan 12, 2010.

  1. dakotajayne
    Joined: Jun 8, 2008
    Posts: 143

    dakotajayne
    Member
    from 3c1

    Ive been entertaining the use of a hydraulic clutch pedal in my '27 modified. I am looking for input on what brand components have been used with success. Also, i have seen hyd. Throwout bearings and like the idea of eliminating the linkage. Let me hear of your experience with these. Many tx.:d
     
  2. hotrod-Linkin
    Joined: Feb 7, 2007
    Posts: 3,382

    hotrod-Linkin
    Member

    i used wilwood master and howe racing release bearing..works wonderful.
     
  3. J&JHotrods
    Joined: Oct 22, 2008
    Posts: 549

    J&JHotrods
    Member

    I've had success adapting chevy S-10 hyd. setups, but it requires welding on the b.housing(for use with o.e. clutch fork). The wagon(avatar)has wilwood components.
     
  4. Scotch
    Joined: May 4, 2001
    Posts: 1,489

    Scotch
    Member

    I used an LT1 hydraulic setup on mine with the T56. Sweet deal- uses factory components (if you keep the LT1 bell or go to an SFI unit like McLeod has) and pedal pressure is 'just right' - not a calf-buster like a heavy mechanical unit or too mushy like some lightweight econo car (and Ford mini truck) units I've driven. The S10 setup feels very similar.

    Check out www.t56kit.com for swap info if you're going with a T56.

    McLeod also offers an aftermarket hyd throwout setup I've heard good things about, but I haven't used it myself.
     

  5. shifts
    Joined: Dec 13, 2002
    Posts: 527

    shifts
    Member

    If you're using a sbc, I'm using a bellhousing, hyd slave & master off a 84 ish camaro. DAVE
     
  6. Spud
    Joined: Oct 13, 2006
    Posts: 123

    Spud
    Member
    from Ohio

    I used the complete setup out of a 85 chevy truck.
     
  7. el Scotto
    Joined: Mar 3, 2004
    Posts: 4,699

    el Scotto
    Member
    from Tracy, CA

    I used a setup from a 1962 Chevy truck... ;)
     
  8. Flatheadguy
    Joined: Dec 2, 2008
    Posts: 2,037

    Flatheadguy
    Member

    No first hand knowledge but have heard that the hydraulic t.o. bearings are a bit....uh, unreliable. But, the repies above seem all quite right.
     
  9. On Henrietta the '38 Ford pickup, 307 Chevy and T-5 5 speed from an S-10, I used the master cylinder and slave cylinder from a '70's Mazda pickup. Just fabricate a bracket to mount the slave cylinder where it can operate the original mechanical clutch fork. Works great, pedal effort is about right (not stiff, but neither does it feel like the pedal is not connected to anything).
     
  10. DirtyJohn
    Joined: Sep 9, 2009
    Posts: 1,065

    DirtyJohn
    Member

    I had 3 wilwood masters and everyone of them leaked through the boot ,and no I did not have any sideload or such. I'm now going with a tilton master (same overall dimensions so perfect replacement) and so far so good, but really too soon to tell. Oh and mind you the wilwoods were leaking after like 35-40 pedal pumps. I haven't even driven my car yet and they were doing this. Wilwood was great so far as replacing them, but enough was enough.
     
  11. ClassicDriver
    Joined: Mar 8, 2010
    Posts: 118

    ClassicDriver
    Member

    I have a question about the hydraulic master cylinder reservoir..... I understand that the reservoir should be the highest part of the system. But could you use a residual pressure valve like those in brake systems that have the brake master cylinder under the floor instead of mounting a remote reservoir? That way I could simple use the reservoir on the clutch master cylinder and keep the system completely under the floor. In my set up the clutch master is lower than the hydraulic throw out bearing.
     

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