Charlie Guthrie wrote:
The reason that clutch cylinders fail is the same as for brakes except that while a few folks replace their brake fluid (mostly at the harassment of their mechanics), almost no one replaces clutch fluid until it self-drains.
I hate cable clutches for maintenance reasons. The ones I have had to deal with were buried under other stuff and suffered wear. Most newer hydraulic clutch slaves are self adjusting. Of course I would never own one of those crummy ahmerikun cars with the internal slave cylinders....only a cheapskate engineer could have come up with that one. Wasn't the first one on a Jeep or other Chrysler product? Admittedly it does away with the bearing actuator fork, but at what a cost in repair when it fails before the clutch.
The only bad clutch slave replacement was on the MG Midget which totally refused to be bled after replacement (until vacuum bleeders came along).
Charlie G
I agree that few people replace/flush their clutch fluid, but very few people do their brake fluid as well, despite mechanic harassment.
I think James Milko likely nailed it. The pistons in the CMC/SC move significantly and are actuated many times per braking incident and brake cylinders hardly move at all. It probably just comes down to the manufacturing tolerances on the piston bores coupled with seals that don't last forever when they get slightly deformed due to a non perfect cylinder on every actuation of the clutch pedal.
Anyway I still think cable clutches are winning

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