Allie
Forum Sage
Okay okay, to be honest it's not even a motorcycle, but it IS a four cylinder. I'm hoping someone can point me along the correct path here, I'm getting air in the hydraulic line for the clutch on my Saturn. It seems to happen primarily when it sits in cold weather, typically on a cold night. I come out the next morning to a mushy clutch pedal. When I pump the pedal it will build up more pressure and it doesn't lose pressure noticeably... until it sits more. I'm thinking in terms of a brake master cylinder in that if it's a spongy pedal it's air in the lines, if it's a sinking pedal it's a faulty master cylinder. This doesn't seem to be a 'sinking' clutch pedal by that criteria.
It's been bled recently due to this probelm, and has been fine for a couple weeks... until last night which was purty cold out and today the pedal was getting spongy again. Where can air be entering the system? I suppose it could be anywhere, but is there a typical problem area? The hydraulic line is mostly visible and looks to be in fine shape with little corrosion. It uses the brake reservoir so it has a flimsy plastic looking hose connecting the two.. could air be coming in there? I thought maybe it sucked some air because the fluid was a little low and the inlet for the clutch is relatively high in the reservoir, but I don't think that happened this time. I'm hoping for something I can fix myself because I have a ton of money in the car this year and I can't afford any more mechanic bills. I'm hopeful because the whole system looks fairly accessible I'm just not sure what to replace or how to test it. Please Help! Pretty Please!
Thanks,
Allie
It's been bled recently due to this probelm, and has been fine for a couple weeks... until last night which was purty cold out and today the pedal was getting spongy again. Where can air be entering the system? I suppose it could be anywhere, but is there a typical problem area? The hydraulic line is mostly visible and looks to be in fine shape with little corrosion. It uses the brake reservoir so it has a flimsy plastic looking hose connecting the two.. could air be coming in there? I thought maybe it sucked some air because the fluid was a little low and the inlet for the clutch is relatively high in the reservoir, but I don't think that happened this time. I'm hoping for something I can fix myself because I have a ton of money in the car this year and I can't afford any more mechanic bills. I'm hopeful because the whole system looks fairly accessible I'm just not sure what to replace or how to test it. Please Help! Pretty Please!
Thanks,
Allie