Well, this go around the mating of the tranny and the motor just ain't cooperating. I licked it last time, see page 5 of this thread, but this time it keeps kicking my ass.
Anyone got any words of wisdom or tricks of the trade to make this go easier?
Where is the old thread, then?
The main thing that has caused trouble for me in getting the engine and trans together is the input shaft splines. Putting the trans in gear, and then rotating the output flanges (the same direction as each other) will rotate the input shaft, which can help line the splines up to the splines in the clutch disk.
--DD
If you are having a hard time getting them to mate, try soft music and some alcohol.
A friend of mine with a 911 used to put dry ice on the trans input shaft to "shrink" it before mating it to the engine. This is similar to the techniques used to put the gears on the crank.
Seems a little out there to me but if you're going crazy might be worth a try.
make sure that the clutch is alighned properly with the tool maybe lossen it all up and center it again ?
good luck
I never have an issue with this
OK, so I pulled the pressure plate and the clutch disc off. Took the disc and lined it up, snout facing the transmission, and she won't go on. Flipped the disc, snout facing the motor, and she slides on without a problem...
Ya can't mount the clutch disc with the snout towards the motor, physically impossible so why in the hell won't she slide on with the disc aligned properly? Am I missing something? I did this before so why in the hell is it not working now???
Did you slide just the disk on the main shaft? Maybe it's boogered up?
Do you have any recent picks of the disk? The only one I found was from your progress thread in 2008 and it kinda looks like the snout is facing toward the engine.
Fortunately I had a new clutch which stated engine side and trans side so there was no possibility for a mix up.
Here is a pic of how the clutch plate looks in place:
The "snout" that he speaks of must point outward (away from the engine), it cannot be turned around or you would never get the pressure plate on..
So the clutch plate needs to be able to slide smoothly over the tranny spindle when it is all disassembled with the "snout" facing towards the tranny.
Stu
Troubleshooting: step by step
Remove the clutch disk
Try placing the clutch disk onto the tranny shaft. If it doesn't go on easily, you may have a wrong clutch disk assembly with the wrong spline spacing. Not the first time that's happened and rebuilding facilities sometimes use the wrong core and rivet on new clutch material.
Can you shove the alignment tool into the center opening in the clutch disk in the orientation shown in the pic ? Should have the same same success/failure as the tranny shaft.
If you can easily fit the clutch disk onto the tranny shaft but can't fit the alignment tool far enough into the flywheel hole, your problem is there.
Hope that helps
So, as one can see by the pictures, as was requested, the disc fits with the snout facing the motor but doesn't the other way around which is the correct positioning.
As you can see by this close up, I think maybe the tines are boogered up? Maybe in my overzealous attempts to get the two components to mate I created this issue which is the only logical explanation. It fit before so I must have messed it up along the way, guess I'll be buying me another disc.
I think I'll go with the cheap $81 disc as I just need it up and running. I'll swap her out with a better set up when I do the complete resto after I get back stateside. Hopefully, the disc will be here by the time we get back from out Scotland vacation. I could have gotten a disc right away here in Deutchland however, they wanted 300 friggin euros at the Porsche dealership!
Try hitting it lightly with a small triangular file, just enough to knock down any burrs.
Stephen,
Give us a closeup pic of the of the splined hole in the snout side of the clutch disk. I can see the side that goes onto the shaft has a few slight booger marks, but I'm betting the snout side is where the problem is.
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