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Towing a standard shift

bradndale
Explorer
Explorer
After 10,000 miles of flat-towing my Subaru standard shift, we needed to replace the clutch asssenbly ($900). We set everything right prior to towing. Does anyone else have this problem?

Moved to Dinghy Towing forum from Towing.

9 REPLIES 9

ripperoo
Explorer
Explorer
vic46 wrote:
naturist wrote:
Clutches generally wear out because drivers (a) sit at stop signs and traffic lights with the transmission in gear and their foot on the clutch (wears out the throw-out bearing); (b) release the clutch way too slowly while revving the engine up on takeoff from rest; (c) drive with left foot resting atop the clutch pedal, resulting in continuous slippage.

With the engine shut off and the transmission in neutral, no part of the clutch assembly should be rotating while towing. I, too, doubt very much than any distance towing was the cause of the problem.


Not sure your (a) is factual. I had a Chev Beretta with a 5 speed manual transmission that I put 225,000 kilometres on and the clutch was never touched, or the engine for that matter. I would guess that at least a third of those klicks were city driving with the normal amount of start and stop city driving.


(a) was referring to throw-out bearing wearing, not clutch. Throw-out bearing essentially sits and spins when sitting still and clutch pushed in.
2012 Ford F250 Super Duty, SC 4x4 XLT, 6.2L, 3.73 gears
2011 Keystone Sprinter Select 29BH

bradndale
Explorer
Explorer
Thanx to all who replied. I have my answer now.

stickdog
Explorer
Explorer
Never changed a clutch in my last three manuals 189,000 139,000 145,000 A/C gave out on all of them time to trade. Two of the three are still on the road.
9-11 WE WILL NEVER FORGET!
FULLTIME SINCE 2010
17 DRV MS 36rssb3
17 F350 King Ranch CC DRW 4x4 6.7 4:10 B&W hitch
John
โ€œA good traveler has no fixed plans, and is not intent on arriving.โ€ Lao Tzu

vic46
Explorer
Explorer
naturist wrote:
Clutches generally wear out because drivers (a) sit at stop signs and traffic lights with the transmission in gear and their foot on the clutch (wears out the throw-out bearing); (b) release the clutch way too slowly while revving the engine up on takeoff from rest; (c) drive with left foot resting atop the clutch pedal, resulting in continuous slippage.

With the engine shut off and the transmission in neutral, no part of the clutch assembly should be rotating while towing. I, too, doubt very much than any distance towing was the cause of the problem.


Not sure your (a) is factual. I had a Chev Beretta with a 5 speed manual transmission that I put 225,000 kilometres on and the clutch was never touched, or the engine for that matter. I would guess that at least a third of those klicks were city driving with the normal amount of start and stop city driving.
[COLOR=]Never argue with an idiot. You will be dragged down to their level and then beaten with experience.

charlysmom_dad
Explorer
Explorer
We've towed our 2004 Subaru about 8,000 miles with no effect on the clutch.
2015 Thor Vegas 24.1

carringb
Explorer
Explorer
I'm with the others.... very unlikely towing was a factor.

But... freak things happen. I was towing a Jeep Grand Cherokee, and made a panic stop. Pull away and the back wheels where spinning backwards!!! The gal left her purse on the center console, and when we stopped the purse knocked the jeep into gear!
2000 Ford E450 V10 VAN! 450,000+ miles
2014 ORV really big trailer
2015 Ford Focus ST

rockhillmanor
Explorer
Explorer
What year and model?

We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.

naturist
Nomad
Nomad
Clutches generally wear out because drivers (a) sit at stop signs and traffic lights with the transmission in gear and their foot on the clutch (wears out the throw-out bearing); (b) release the clutch way too slowly while revving the engine up on takeoff from rest; (c) drive with left foot resting atop the clutch pedal, resulting in continuous slippage.

With the engine shut off and the transmission in neutral, no part of the clutch assembly should be rotating while towing. I, too, doubt very much than any distance towing was the cause of the problem.

gijoecam
Explorer
Explorer
Are you implying that flat-towing the Subaru somehow caused the clutch failure? If so, I'm unclear how the two are related. There is NO wear on the clutch whatsoever when the vehicle is being towed.