Clutch M/T Vantage
#1
Clutch M/T Vantage
My 2015 Vantage Gt has about 1200 miles on it. Yesterday while parked on incline the car started to roll into some bushes.. must have been daydreaming. Not thinking to clearly I accelerated and shifted into first. Luckily I avoided the bushes but smelled burnt clutch immediately after. I have been driving stick for the last 40 years and don't recall ever smelling a burnt clutch. I have been careful to match rpms on down shifts and easy low rpms into first. Is this a common issue with these cars and did I cause any excessive wear to the clutch.
#4
I smoked my clutch to avoid beingrear ended many years ago in a 2007 vantage of smoke from the burning clutch looked like I had smoked the tires but the smell was definitely clutch!
Anyhow I had driven the car 25,000 hard miles before I sold it in the clutch was still fine.
Anyhow I had driven the car 25,000 hard miles before I sold it in the clutch was still fine.
#7
Noob here and looking to get into a '16 V8 Vantage GT soon.
Is there not a Hill Start Assist feature on these cars?....just wondering.
Is there not a Hill Start Assist feature on these cars?....just wondering.
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#10
Thank you.
BTW, I love your new Alloro Green V8V GT. I'd love to get it in green but too bad Sage Green is no longer offered.
#11
The 3 pedal car has hill assistance as well. Go for a test drive and feel it for yourself.
#12
I have smelled clutch on my V8V much more than any of my other stick shift cars. They don't like inclines an unfortunately I have an incline into my garage. I think the clutch is a softer material and like many other 'exotics' clutches don't last as long. Maserati's burning out at less than 20k miles. I smelled clutch on a Gransport test drive and didn't have any inclines.
The clutch on my 84 GTI lasted over 100k miles. I changed an original clutch on a BMW at 200k many years ago.
The clutch on my 84 GTI lasted over 100k miles. I changed an original clutch on a BMW at 200k many years ago.
#15
How do you guys work your clutch? Specifically, how much are you letting the clutch do the work for you and how early are you giving it gas when starting off in first?
I've noticed with my car that I don't have to start using the gas until after the clutch is engaged. If I release the clutch very slowly at the engagement point, it'll grab and I can start rolling without pressing the gas. In fact, I can go from a dead stop, into first, and then into second without ever touching the gas pedal. Caveat is that I've got a heavy-duty clutch so it might be more grabby (and therefore able to do that). Just wondering if the OEM clutch lets you do that. Seems to me that a lot of people give the car gas too soon when working the clutch. I'm not saying that they don't know how to drive stick. Rather, the clutch in our cars is a bit different so you need to work it differently or you'll get the burning smell.
I've noticed with my car that I don't have to start using the gas until after the clutch is engaged. If I release the clutch very slowly at the engagement point, it'll grab and I can start rolling without pressing the gas. In fact, I can go from a dead stop, into first, and then into second without ever touching the gas pedal. Caveat is that I've got a heavy-duty clutch so it might be more grabby (and therefore able to do that). Just wondering if the OEM clutch lets you do that. Seems to me that a lot of people give the car gas too soon when working the clutch. I'm not saying that they don't know how to drive stick. Rather, the clutch in our cars is a bit different so you need to work it differently or you'll get the burning smell.