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Air seeping into slave cylinder?


96splash!

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 18, 2023
Messages
47
City
Kansas
Vehicle Year
1996
Transmission
Manual
96 ranger. Brand new LUK clutch kit, flywheel, master and slave.

Somehow air is getting into the slave cylinder. If I disconnect the master cylinder from the slave the pushrod is solid. Zero play at all. System was bleed as per service manual. Worked fine for a few hundred miles then I lose firmness in the clutch. If I rapidly pump the pedal wait a few moments and repeat 2 or 3 times. Then open the slave and close slave while someone pushes the pedal a time or two pedal firms up for a few hundred miles. I'm stumped. I really don't want to pull the transmission again. Any idea how air can be entering only the slave?
 
Bad slave?

I know. I knowwwwww… I hate it to. My F-150 was killing slaves once a year for like… 6 years… before I got tired of it and upgraded the transmission, slave, master, and line… then it started blowing the line off the slave. With dad’s help, we cut, bent, and fit a forked clamp that bolts to the bellhousing and clamps the line in the slave. I get about 5 years on a slave cylinder now :icon_rofl:
 
It would have to have been bad from the factory. Ulg. I do\nt want to drop this darn transmission again.....
 
It would have to have been bad from the factory. Ulg. I do\nt want to drop this darn transmission again.....
Yup, unfortunately, parts being bad right out of the box is becoming common. The only other thing I can think of is maybe the line has a bad o-ring or isn’t sealing/seating properly.

Wrestling the ZF5 out of my F-150 to change the slave is a bear. A Ranger transmission is easy in comparison, but still not fun. A garage and a lift would make both a lot easier…
 
I had a problem with the last clutch slave I installed. I ran it for about two years and had to bleed it about every two to three weeks due to air getting in it. It was not leaking, and I could not figure out how air got in it. It was a SACHS slave, and it was the first time I use anything other than a LUK. Last year I installed a new LUK, and it has been working properly since then.

I don't think it was the SACHS slave that was the problem. I suspected it was the O-ring in the disconnect. I reasoned that it was the only place that could get air in without leaking. When I pulled the old O-ring out while installing the new slave, I found the old O-ring had damage. I had a new one and used it.

So, before you pull the transmission to replace the slave, try replacing the disconnect O-ring first. It is easy and not very expensive.
 

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