jamesw
Member
Registered: 28th Jun 02
Location: Station Town, County Durham
User status: Offline
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a normall clutch, and a paddle clutch?
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sassyminx
Member
Registered: 10th Jan 04
Location: Hartlepool Drives: Cossie
User status: Offline
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a paddle clutch can handle more power and doesnt heat up as much iirc
but apparently no gud i traffic, theres no biting point from what ive been told
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arf_SRi
Member
Registered: 25th Oct 04
User status: Offline
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i think sassy is right, from what my mate told me about his paddle clutch in his mitsi gto it was a right cnut driving in traffic, but sweet as a nut otherwise.
its like on/off rather than biting point etc
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jr
Member
Registered: 20th May 02
Location: Kent
User status: Offline
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paddle clutch as the name suggusts has paddles of clutch material, as apose to a normal clutch which has materal all the way round it
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SVM 286
Member
Registered: 13th Feb 05
Location: pain
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by jamesw
a normall clutch, and a paddle clutch?
A normal clutch has an organic based circular centre plate and road biased spring pressure in the cover for traffic friendly usage i.e. a light pedal.
A paddle clutch has rounded square/oblong pads of sintered bronze material aranged in a starfish pattern in combination with a much higher clamping force from the cover.
The net result being no slippage under high torque loads, but a much heavier pedal and an on/off switch type of operation.
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