Clutch not engaging??
I had the same problem on my '90 hatch. I thought it was a broken spring in the clutch as well. It turns out it was the clutch pedal itself. The bracket that holds the clutch pedal in line on the pedal assembly broke.
Last edited by 1hgej1; Sep 17, 2009 at 09:49 PM.
you just need to get someone to look at the throw out bearing dis engagement arm while you press in the clutch pedal. if it moves your cable isnt broken...but maybe its stretched and doesn move enough to dis engage clutch for syncro's to line up.
lol. He's not being a jackass cause he's telling you the truth. You listed a problem, they gave you options & now you're asking someone to confirm it? Nobody can confirm unless they're there. You cant know exactly what it is until you take some of the advice in here and eliminate the easiest options (the ones that dont require you to dissassemble). I'm not trying to bash you. GL on your problem.
Last edited by 94accord; Sep 18, 2009 at 01:39 AM.
lol. He's not being a jackass cause he's telling you the truth. You listed a problem, they gave you options & now you're asking someone to confirm it? Nobody can confirm unless they're there. You cant know exactly what it is until you take some of the advice in here and eliminate the easiest options (the ones that dont require you to dissassemble). I'm not trying to bash you. GL on your problem.
thanks guys for all the help im gona mess around with it this weekend
First - if you have to start in gear, its the clutch won't disengage, when the clutch is engaged, the trans is locked to the engine. Just a FYI.
Second - one thing you're going to want to check; you said the previous owner switched transmissions. Make sure its stock to your car. If its not, he could have mix/matched flywheels, screwing up the offsets. (or worse, unbalancing the motor)
This being said; It could be many things. Personally, I would have someone push down on the fork lever outside the trans and see if that did anything. If it did, check;
a.) the pedals
b.) the cable.
c.) the cable mount.
If the redneck clutch lever test didn't work or the other things are all good, the only other things it could be are the following;
a.) a bent clutch fork
b.) a bad/improper clutch disc
c.) a bad/improper pressure plate
d.) a bad/improper throwout bearing
Good luck.
Second - one thing you're going to want to check; you said the previous owner switched transmissions. Make sure its stock to your car. If its not, he could have mix/matched flywheels, screwing up the offsets. (or worse, unbalancing the motor)
This being said; It could be many things. Personally, I would have someone push down on the fork lever outside the trans and see if that did anything. If it did, check;
a.) the pedals
b.) the cable.
c.) the cable mount.
If the redneck clutch lever test didn't work or the other things are all good, the only other things it could be are the following;
a.) a bent clutch fork
b.) a bad/improper clutch disc
c.) a bad/improper pressure plate
d.) a bad/improper throwout bearing
Good luck.
First - if you have to start in gear, its the clutch won't disengage, when the clutch is engaged, the trans is locked to the engine. Just a FYI.
Second - one thing you're going to want to check; you said the previous owner switched transmissions. Make sure its stock to your car. If its not, he could have mix/matched flywheels, screwing up the offsets. (or worse, unbalancing the motor)
This being said; It could be many things. Personally, I would have someone push down on the fork lever outside the trans and see if that did anything. If it did, check;
a.) the pedals
b.) the cable.
c.) the cable mount.
If the redneck clutch lever test didn't work or the other things are all good, the only other things it could be are the following;
a.) a bent clutch fork
b.) a bad/improper clutch disc
c.) a bad/improper pressure plate
d.) a bad/improper throwout bearing
Good luck.
Second - one thing you're going to want to check; you said the previous owner switched transmissions. Make sure its stock to your car. If its not, he could have mix/matched flywheels, screwing up the offsets. (or worse, unbalancing the motor)
This being said; It could be many things. Personally, I would have someone push down on the fork lever outside the trans and see if that did anything. If it did, check;
a.) the pedals
b.) the cable.
c.) the cable mount.
If the redneck clutch lever test didn't work or the other things are all good, the only other things it could be are the following;
a.) a bent clutch fork
b.) a bad/improper clutch disc
c.) a bad/improper pressure plate
d.) a bad/improper throwout bearing
Good luck.
But before I would do any extensive $ repairs, I would get a friend to push the clutch pedal in and visually see if the fork moves any or enough.






