Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hi all;

I actually thought my gearbox was rooted but thanks to an hours browsing and searching around on the forum, I found out that there are two cylinders that exist and when i went to check my car, the master was bone dry. I filled it up with brake fluid and the clutch is working better now (still not as good as before but much much better ... I tried looking for a leak but its all bone dry near the cylinder and also near the footwell. I drove for around an hour round trip and came back and the fluid was still right where i topped it up till.

My question is, should I bother replacing the master and slave cylinder or wait to see if it gets empty again? Or just go and get it bled and looked at once from a mechanic when I'm getting my gearbox oil replaced?

Thanks for your help :)

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/375765-clutch-master-cylinder-empty/
Share on other sites

When you say "footwell", did you mean inside the car? Because if you didn't then go look for brake fluid running down the inside of the firewall into the carpet and sound deadening. If you lie on your back with your head under the steering column and run your hand over the clutch pushrod (runs between the pedal and the firewall and passes through a rubber boot at the firewall) and you feel fluid, then the master has been bypassing internally and leaking out its back side. If you don't find any trace of fluid in the car, then it is probably the slave that has leaked it out. Get under the car and look for evidence around the slave. If it's been leaking there it should be fairly obvious.

If not - drive it for a week or two, check it every time you get in or out of the car, and see what happens. If the fluid goes away again, then get to a mechanic and get it fixed. Not having a clutch is a massive pain in the arse.

Yes I meant inside the car. The pushrod (if thats what its called) did have a bit of liquid at the end near the rubber seal (on the firewall end) but I'm guessing thats normal? I'll get the slave checked out while the gearbox oil is being replaced. If the fluid does not decrease after a couple of weeks, I should still get the system bled out correct?

Thanks for your input.

My R32 GTR had a leak from the clutch master cylinder that took about 1-2 weeks to notice a drop in fluid level with no obvious/noticable leaks.

Replaced the master cylinder and all good for about a year or two and then the booster stopped doing it's thing and had an intermittently hard and then soft pedal.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Had a chat to Tony Mamo - he advised that looking at the graph's shape (regardless of number translation) it shouldn't be levelling off like that up top. He said it looks like the car is running a restrictor plate or something of that nature. Luckily the last dyno pull on E85 was saved to the PC - So I did a quick trace of Barometric KPA vs Intake manifold pressure, and lo and behold I see a copy of the 'waves' I was seeing on the dyno: I'm not entirely sure how to go about addressing this. It may be worth sacrificing IAT to run a more direct intake for the motor. Though packaging this could be flat out impossible given the constraints of the car. I should have removed the intake pipe to see if this made a difference but looking at this graph I now have something to potentially test in the future and think about. This one is from an old track day log in the OLD setup going through gears on track.
    • Oh, I forgot too, all the multimedia stuff captured and sold through things like people playing Pokemon Go. Pokemon Go specifically, can actually be traced all the way back to a CIA investment company too. So yep, they're watching everything. Not to mention the new stuff where they've worked out how to use WiFi signals to be able to map occupants inside of a building. That one would be something that I see being more used in public/government buildings, as you need to understand the signals when the room has no one in it first. It's not as easy as Hollywood would like you to think it is.
    • Followed ☺️ Assuming those are NEO rods, then at least 400kW all day.
    • Lets keep this going , Spotted this very stock V35 in Penrith and also saw a nice R32 FLY past me on Castlereagh rd , sounded really good.
    • Great work! Give it a clean up with some Emery paper, and I'd run a thread die over the threads too to clean them up. It will make reinstall much easier, and also life easier for the next time it needs to come out.
×
×
  • Create New...