You said "slave!" That's racist! No, sorry. The only way to replace those is with pickle forks and alot of knuckle-whacking action.
2007-02-26 16:58:38
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Per Alldata Online the transmission has to be removed to access the clutch slave cylinder.
2007-02-26 17:12:57
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answer #2
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answered by know da stuff 4
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i own a shop,and your going to have to get it up high enough to get in under it,and remove the line from it,and the remove the cylinder off of it ,have a cup handy to catch the fluid from it,then install the new one tighten the bolts up,and put the line back on,add fluid to the reservoir,and open the bleeder valve a little ,and let this thing gravity bleed its self out for a while,gravity will bleed the air out of it better than pumping it will,you don't have to open it all the way up just a little,and it will take a while to get it to start coming out,once it does,don't let the master cylinder go dry on it,once it bleeds out tighten the bleeder and test it,you may have to do it twice,but that's the best method of doing this,pumping it can damage it and it dry,good luck,i hope this help,s.
2007-02-26 17:00:47
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answer #3
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answered by dodge man 7
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