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5 answers

Bleed your hydraulic lines.

2006-09-17 13:07:24 · answer #1 · answered by DidacticRogue 5 · 0 0

Of course the first thing to try, would be to bleed the clutch. Good luck. Bleeding a clutch is a pain in the butt.
- I've done this with some sucess - loosen the bolts attaching the slave cylinder a few turns. Bleed the clutch. Top up the master cyl and install the cover. Then tighten the bolts to the slave cyl. This will force the piston back into the slave cyl and pressurize the clutch line.
- You can try replacing the clutch line with a steel braided line. The rubber ones get weak after awhile.
- Rebuild the master cyl and/or the slave cyl.
- Usually the only cure is to replace the master cyl.
- A spongy clutch isn't as bad as spongy brakes.

2006-09-17 20:43:13 · answer #2 · answered by guardrailjim 7 · 0 0

If it is a hydraulic clutch, take it in and have it done. Don't mess with those too much if you aren't an experienced mechanic.

2006-09-18 17:50:27 · answer #3 · answered by atvman_400 5 · 0 0

likely air bleed system

2006-09-17 22:47:35 · answer #4 · answered by scott s 2 · 0 0

check the tention on the cluch cable

2006-09-17 20:07:03 · answer #5 · answered by Daddy DJ 1 · 0 1

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