dunketh wrote:Glad to hear you got home in the end, I thought I'd check on here!
Sorry to have to abandon you 'mid-job' but it was fun whilst it lasted.
And next time (yes, there appears to be a need for a next time) hopefully it'll be warmer, and I'll sort some form of on the job refreshments! At least we know how to do it now..
I couldn't figure out why that release ring wouldn't sit straight. If you can get hold of another pressure plate we can swap it all over again.
Trouble is, if its not being pressed on level that would affect it.. I think we just assumed (I know I did) it would 'go-in' straight with the weight of the pedal behind it.
I have a feeling one of the fingers, springs it acts on, or pivot got manged when the input shaft caught on it. This is with now in a warm room having eaten hindsight of course.
I did think it'd be fine myself, but the more I think about it the more I have distant memories of the fingers needign to be level as the pressure plate springs act directly on them - So if they're not level, the springs aren't working right IIRC.
Aside from that bloody alternator bolt it wasnt too bad a job.
The worrying thing is that bolt never did turn up! Still, I've seen it advocated on here the top one is all you need, and as the engine's got to come out again and the bottom one is a pain... ;)
The driveway and hoist are always available.
I have a feeling they're going to be revisted in the near future then
The chap who gave up his hoist, access to any tools you could ever want and a nice driveway was a guy named Ian... the worlds expert on landrovers.
Ah ha. He might have any tool I could ever want, but could it ever be found?
btw, how did it drive home in the end?
Frighteningly.
It rattles, vibrates, and generally feels like it might explode at any time. Basically, the whatever-we-broke has made it less driveable than it was! Though being the mechanically sympathetic soul I am I did dump the clutch a few times to see if the slip was still there, and as a result now seem to have discovered a bit of lash in the diff. The drag makes things tricky, and it still feels a bit sluggish rather than sharp, but there's no slip anymore

So even with a probably mangled pressure plate the new friction plate can actually friction, unlike that grotty glazed blackened thing that came off. If it wasn't losing power making thing wobble instead of rotate, and didn't sound like a deathtrap about to combust, it might almost be fun to drive
