• Hi Guest!
    If you appreciate British Car Forum and our 25 years of supporting British car enthusiasts with technical and anicdotal information, collected from our thousands of great members, please support us with a low-cost subscription. You can become a supporting member for less than the dues of most car clubs.

    There are some perks with a member upgrade!
    **Upgrade Now**
    (PS: Subscribers don't see this gawd-aweful banner
Tips
Tips

TR2/3/3A Clutch Swallows Air -- TR3

Well... There IS another problem. My cap vent is demonstrably clear & open -- yet, I lost my clutch again, Saturday night. Clutch was "low" but useable on the way to my gig. Two hours later, when I went to start for home, the clutch was useless. Grrrrrrrrr...
 
Collapsed line potentially? Hard to think of ways to pull vacuum and get air in there
 
I know you said that you just did the master but a bad master would account for all your problems. Note Tomshobby post above.
Tom
 
I am confident of the master -- and its adjustment -- and, further, don't know how it could make bubbles in the slave cylinder without filling the feed tube first.

Collapsed line? That would make some sense, too, except my line is also < four-years-old.

I suppose I should replace it (cheap enough) when I rebuild my slave. I'm really swinging in the dark at "why." I am certain of the symptoms but have no idea why. Fortunately, these are all cheap-&-easy repair projects. But, dang it, I want to know WHY!

Also -- Fortunately, I am adept at driving with no clutch disengagement mechanism. There is talk of this in another current thread. I've driven my '65 Volksy bus for days with no clutch (broken cable). Also my '65 BMW cycle (ditto) (also, easier). Why don't they sell these oft-needed parts at the corner 7-Eleven? That's how I got home, last Saturday night. Speed-shifting, and watching way ahead for the signals.
 
Moseso said:
and, further, don't know how it could make bubbles in the slave cylinder without filling the feed tube first.
Easy, all it has to do is block the return port (sometimes) while the fluid cools overnight.

I'm not saying that is the problem, just explaining how the MC could cause the slave to suck air.
 
Geo Hahn said:
TR3driver said:
...If you or anyone knows of a bellows seal that will fit inside the TR3 reservoir cap, I would like to know about it...

One of the local Healey guys (same reservoir as the TR3A I think) came up with a GM seal from the Help! section of the FLAPS...

Correcting my prior post, I picked up said seal at O'Reilly's but the Dorman p/n I had was not in their system. This is the one I found on the hook:

BrakeReservoirGasket.jpg


It is just a skosch larger that the original seal but fits the Girling cap just fine:

BrakeReservoirGasket2.jpg
 
STILL sucking air...

Did the slave cylinder, Saturday. Readjusted the pedal free-play on the master. The foot valve is demonstrably opening and closing. Becky pressed the clutch while I watched in the reservoir. There is a little spurt of fluid into the reservoir, just before the foot valve closes at the beginning of the stroke. Also, if the foot valve didn't open, I wouldn't be able to bleed the system -- no fluid could get into the master.

The problem has worsened. I can't get two days out of my clutch without it becoming totally inoperative.

The collapsed hose theory doesn't have much appeal to me, as I can see and feel the clutch returning smartly. There is no restriction in the clutch travel, either way. It's the only thing I haven't touched yet, so I'll probably replace it -- but I have lost all faith that I can repair this.

Reservoir cap vent: OPEN <span style="font-style: italic">check</span>
Master cyl: Rebuilt 2011, foot valve demonstrably doing it's job. Exterior dry as a BONE. <span style="font-style: italic">check</span>
Slave Cyl: Rebuilt last week. Interior shiny. Exterior dry as a BONE. (Oh, alright, it had a film of motor oil on it, but I don't lose fluid) <span style="font-style: italic">check</span>
Hose: untouched, but isn't restricting clutch movement in any discernible way. No <span style="font-style: italic">check</span> yet.

WTF else????

Starting to feel like composing a Craigslist ad. "Cool TR3 -- Needs a little work."

OR -- and this is a better idea -- convert the car to cable operated clutch! I'll bet I could cobble something together.
 
I'd scratch the craigs list and cobbling ideas before you start regretting it.

There is a clevis adjustment on the rod at the slave and one on the master. Is it possible you are over stroking the M/C? When the pedal is the whole way in, the piston (and seal) could be forced against the bottom of the M/C. Maybe it has nothing to do with your issue, but it's worth a look.
 
Have you rebuilt the master cylinder? If a slave fails it will leak but most M/C failures I have had presented no leak, just marginal or ineffective performance.

What has failed on those has been the little seal at the end of internal bits. This one:

M-C-1.jpg


I think it works like a check valve and when it fails some fluid gets past it and back to the reservoir.
 
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:]I think it works like a check valve and when it fails some fluid gets past it and back to the reservoir.[/QUOTE]

Exactly right. And then you get no (or reduced) pressure down the line to the slave. Sadly, not my problem. My problem is air getting into the system from somewhere. When freshly bled, and not full of bubbles, The clutch operates just as it should. Then it gulps down some more air -- and doesn't operate at all like it should.

And, yes, the master cyl. was the first thing I rebuilt -- just last summer. I've got another kit on the way.

(Knock wood, knock wood, knock wood -- I can't even believe I'm saying this out loud) I'm sure glad it's the clutch doing this, and not the brakes!
 
Re: Clutch Swallows Air -- TR3 [Solved???]

About three-or-four weeks ago, I bled the clutch, got in the car -- and didn't even make it 1/4-mile before losing my clutch pedal. So I put the car in the garage and waited -- first, for parts and, second, for time to work on it.

Yesterday, I got around to it. First, I replaced the cover gasket on my leaky rear axle. I think I got it this time...

Then I drained the clutch hydraulics. I looked at the hose to see if it had the problem that Randall describes. Nope. It looks brand-new -- which it pretty much is. So, with nothing else left to work on, I threw a new seal kit into the master cylinder. Nothing looked amiss inside there -- good looking seals, shiny bore -- but, what the heck, a seal kit is cheap enough, and it's just not that hard a job to do.

Becky wasn't around to help me bleed the system, so I thought I'd try to "gravity bleed" it, as I've read about here. Boy, howdy! Does that ever work slick! I just put some fluid in the reservoir, crawled underneath and opened the bleed valve, and, after about a minute, there was fluid running out of it. I closed it up, thinking, "If I actually have a clutch, I'll be a monkey's uncle." When I climbed in and pressed the pedal, it felt fine-and-firm. Ook, ook!

So far: yesterday's test drive and this morning's ride to work, the clutch works just fine. It worked fine like that for a year, after the last time I rebuilt the master -- and then began sucking air again.

I STILL have no idea how this failure occurs, but I think I have proven that, if you just tear the whole system apart and rebuild EVERYTHING, you have to at least be touching the cause.
 
Re: Clutch Swallows Air -- TR3 [Solved???]

Congratulations! Persistence pays off!
 
Back
Top