ACTman
Rock Sponsor (Level 1)
- First Name
- Dirk
- Joined
- Apr 23, 2019
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 111
- Reaction score
- 259
- Location
- Lancaster, CA
- Website
- www.advancedclutch.com
- Vehicle(s)
- 2015 Jeep JKUR, 2003 Jeep Wrangler
- Occupation
- President and head cheerleader at ACT
- Thread starter
- #76
Yes, there is a clutch delay valve in the slave cylinder. The restrictor can be removed with some effort, but it will not make much difference. The restrictor slows the flow of fluid in one direction (as clutch is engaging), but it only prevents very fast or sudden clutch drops. This can make a big difference for drag racing as you launch the car, but in the Jeep, I doubt you will notice anything.Does anyone know if the stock factory clutch slave cylinder, or the hydraulic line, have what is known as the "Clutch Delay Valve" in place? This is installed in all manual trans. Dodge Challengers and contributes to vague, inconsistent clutch feel. I have searched and cannot find any reference to it in Jeep forums. In the case of the Challengers, it is easily removed and vastly improves clutch operation.
I would attribute the vague clutch feel of Dodge Challenger to the poor twin disc design. We tested a brand new Challenger clutch and one disc begins to engage long before the other one. The weird non-progressive engagement is great for drivability (prevents stalling), but terrible for those looking for performance.
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