Toycrusher
Well-Known Member
Larger tires and taller gearing absolutely results in additional clutch disc wear, as well as heat damage to the flywheel and pressure plate. However, clutch wear would not affect shift quality. If anything, it means additional clearance when depressing the clutch pedal which would only lessen the difficulty shifting. Most of the shift issues reported on these forums are related to the inability of the synchros to match input and output shaft speeds for gear engagementSo adding to this thread:
I had an interesting convo with my mechanic. He called several companies and talked to them about the whole clutch situation. In his opinion of working with and on performance and off road vehicles- McLeod seems to be the ticket, based on the design and their knowledge of the subject.
He also said told me some of the stuff McLeod has been looking in to- basically, they seem to think there is a correlation between People with larger tires running sub-optimal axle gearing and a much higher failure rate, logic being it takes more slipping of the clutch to get/ keep things moving.
Food for thought, if nothing else.
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