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CLUTCH EXPERTS - Hot spots on flywheel

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by striper, Oct 21, 2011.

  1. striper
    Joined: Mar 22, 2005
    Posts: 4,498

    striper
    Member

    I'm not the sharpest tool when it comes to this sort of stuff. There I said it.

    I just pulled the gearbox off my nailhead and removed the pressure plate. I noticed these weird markings that look like the flywheel has gotten hot. There are matching marks on the pressure plate but the clutch plate seems OK. I haven't noticed any weird behaviour that would explain this. Anyone know what it is and whether it is a problem?

    It's strange because the shapes are very random.

    [​IMG]

    Thanks

    Pete
     
  2. Dynaflash_8
    Joined: Sep 24, 2008
    Posts: 3,048

    Dynaflash_8
    Member
    from Auburn WA

    possibly warped pressure plate or flywheel? It doesnt take much contact to create heat
     
  3. Da' Bomb
    Joined: Apr 8, 2005
    Posts: 438

    Da' Bomb
    Member

    Warpage.....Have the flywheel faced when you put the new clutch in.
     
  4. shinysideup
    Joined: Sep 1, 2008
    Posts: 1,627

    shinysideup
    BANNED
    from ruskin, fl

  5. Mr48chev
    Joined: Dec 28, 2007
    Posts: 35,977

    Mr48chev
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Also a sign that you may be riding the clutch a bit. Driving habits are another cause of that.
     
  6. striper
    Joined: Mar 22, 2005
    Posts: 4,498

    striper
    Member

    I wasn't planning on putting a new clutch in. That one only has about 3000 miles on it. I would have thought a high spot or warpage would show up with a more regular shape like a circle or similar. Not disbelieving you.

    I am putting a new flywheel in it, trying to fix a starter problem I've been having. Busted two.

    Oh and it's not riding the clutch. If you saw my pedal location you'd know how uncomfortable it would be to do that.

    Thanks for the thoughts fellas.

    Pete
     
  7. bobss396
    Joined: Aug 27, 2008
    Posts: 18,739

    bobss396
    Member

    Both friction surfaces look really clean. I'd just have them both ground, toss in a new disc and go. Make sure the clutch is adjusted as well for correct free play.

    I've seen severe hot spots on abused cars where the hot spots tore the clutch disc facing.

    Bob
     
  8. nevrdun
    Joined: Jul 8, 2007
    Posts: 22

    nevrdun
    Member
    from lombard,il

    Is this a hot spot or is this a rust/corrosion problem. Is it possible moisture could have gotten in there at some time?


    Norm
     
  9. Atwater Mike
    Joined: May 31, 2002
    Posts: 11,618

    Atwater Mike
    Member

    Good call, Norm. That looks like 'black rust', the 'hot spot' on the flywheel may be on the minimally raised surface where the rust was concentrated...
     
  10. MRTS33
    Joined: Aug 17, 2011
    Posts: 207

    MRTS33
    Member

    Or condensation. Looks more like a stain to me. Try some light sandpaper see if it comes of easily, if not it could be a hot spot from being a high spot.
     
  11. terryble
    Joined: Sep 25, 2008
    Posts: 541

    terryble
    Member
    from canada

    Water marks, take your feather edger with some 220 buff the surfaces put it back together and drive it like you stole it. If it was fine before why did you take it a part? If it ain't broke why are you fixing it?
     
  12. Ebbsspeed
    Joined: Nov 11, 2005
    Posts: 6,479

    Ebbsspeed
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    See post #6
     
  13. 77powerwagon
    Joined: Oct 22, 2010
    Posts: 44

    77powerwagon
    Member

    make sure your torque spec and sequence are correct for the pressure plate. i've seen hot spots develop from improper torque and wrong sequence. but it doesn't look that bad. i've seen a lot worse at the shop i work at.
     
  14. bobss396
    Joined: Aug 27, 2008
    Posts: 18,739

    bobss396
    Member

    Right, it does look too evenly spaced to be hot spots, those are more random.

    Bob
     
  15. tisdelski
    Joined: Jul 19, 2005
    Posts: 260

    tisdelski
    Member

    Hi guys,

    I see three marks on the pressure plate, three marks on the flywheel they look to line up pretty well.

    I`d put a dial indicator on the flywheel, roll it over and if it was warped, I`d have it ground.

    Odds are its just fine, back a hundred years ago when I was an automotive machinist I had people come in with flywheels so bad that you visually see the warpage and when I asked them why they kept driving it , they would often reply that they didn`t have any idea the clutch was that bad.

    My point being , that clutch looks as if it only has 3000 miles on it, if it isn`t crazy warped, the disc and throwout bearing look and feel fine, run it.

    Gary
     
  16. striper
    Joined: Mar 22, 2005
    Posts: 4,498

    striper
    Member

    Thanks for all the input guys. Didn't think of, and can't rule out, rust. The colours of the spots sure look like heat but I guess if there was rust, that would cause heat due to being slightly raised...yes?

    I think I'll take a lot of the above advice: As mentioned I'm installing a new flywheel, I'll give the pressure plate a light sand, replace the clutch plate, be careful with my torquing of the pressure plate and check for correct adjustment / freeplay.

    I reckon that about covers it. I appreciate all the ideas and ***istance.

    Thanks, Pete
     
  17. I see this kind of thing all of the time. You need a heavier spring rated pressure plate. If you drive hard and accelerate hard with power shifts the clutch slips every time you shift. Just have the flywheel ground and upgrade the clutch disc and pressure plate >>>>.
     
  18. grits
    Joined: Mar 9, 2006
    Posts: 3,180

    grits
    Member

    yep
     
  19. OldTC
    Joined: Aug 18, 2011
    Posts: 770

    OldTC
    Member

    My sentiments exactly,......there's not enough pressure to keep the clutch disk from slipping around in between the flywheel and pressure plate.

    Either get a stronger sprung pressure plate, a thicker disk or an "adjustment" adjustment.
     
  20. Mike Moreau
    Joined: Sep 16, 2011
    Posts: 291

    Mike Moreau
    Member

    The discolorations seem to match on the flywheel to pressure plate. It is unlikely that heat would transfer from flywheel to pressure plate in corresponding locations. Normal disc operation would most likely spread heat around more. Are there matching discolorations on the disc? I would be inclined to think that some shop fluid, cleaner, or oil got in the clutch ***embly and worked around both sides of the disc. Was the bell housing off the engine for a period of time before you took it apart, allowing contamination? If the discolorations did not match flywheel to pressure plate, I would suspect hard spots in the flywheel due to inconsistent carbon concentration in the metal (typical cast iron deal).) A local clutch rebuilder (about 40 years experience) says ALWAYS Blanchard grind the flywheel when replacing the clutch. Since you tore it apart because of the starter and had no clutch issues, go for a light cleaning/sanding of the flywheel/pressure plate as previously suggested and concentrate on your starter issues. Good luck and let us know if you solve this mystery.
     
  21. striper
    Joined: Mar 22, 2005
    Posts: 4,498

    striper
    Member

    Thanks Spitbucket. The discolourations on the pressure plate do match the flywheel. I removed the clutch straight after removing the gearbox and bellhousing and found what you see in the photo. The other thing I'll do this time around is be very careful with my cleanliness during re-***embly.
     
  22. 1950ChevySuburban
    Joined: Dec 20, 2006
    Posts: 6,185

    1950ChevySuburban
    Member Emeritus
    from Tucson AZ

    Where I work, we do maybe 4 clutches a month on GM and Ford pickups. I don't know about you, but finding a decent non-Chinese clutch is damn near impossible. Some of these installs come back chattering and upon dis***embly look exactly like what you have.

    I've had the best luck with LuK brand clutches over the years.

    Also, when installing a clutch go easy on pilot bearing grease, and degrease all new surfaces to remove the anti-rust coating applied at the factory.
     
  23. 40FORDPU
    Joined: Mar 15, 2009
    Posts: 3,996

    40FORDPU
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Winner! This is caused from heat, which was caused from clutch slippage. Back in the day, (before flywheel surface type grinders) we used to "turn" flywheels on brake lathes, it would become obvious in a hurry that these type of "hotspots" run deeper then just the surface.
     
  24. Just another note " Brand new flywheels right outta the box aren't always straight" >>>>.
     

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