So, I'm tired of fighting with futile external fixes for my truck's clutch. After the number of times things have been bled, the few different lubes I've tried thinking it was a synchro issue, the darn thing has just gotten worse and I have realized now that the clutch is dragging. It's getting to the point where I sometimes have to shut it off at a stoplight to get it in gear. The part that I don't get is that the clutch still acts "normal." It always engages at the same distance away from the floor.
I have no idea why, but it's not something I can fix from outside. I'm just going to re-do the whole bloody thing. The frustrating part is that I know the PO did a clutch, master, and slave right before selling. I know that because I saw the receipts and visual inspection showed all the tell-tale signs... as in, the master was the only thing under the hood that was perfectly clean, the bleeder for the slave was pristine, and the transmission case had all the fresh greasy fingerprints on it. My only guess is that they cut the flywheel too much instead of using a new one.
At any rate, it all has to come apart, and given how cheap parts are for a 94 Fordzda Branger, I can do the whole thing for about $200 in parts.
I know nothing about good clutch brands, nor the materials used to make them. In all honesty, the only thing I know about clutches is how to replace them. I did a lot when I was working in repair shops. Box of generic parts shows up, I install them, customer drives away.
Application 94 Mazda B4000 (Ford Ranger 4.0L/M5OD). I frequently push the limits with the truck. 70% of it's life is driving around with a little lumber in the back. The other 30% is towing 4000 lbs around town with lots of hills, lots of stop and go, and (with 160 hp) lots of shifting on the highway with a trailer to keep speed. I truly use it like it is an F150.
I want something that will take the heat, but not be a leg-killer, and not be tough to engage smoothly. I assume (since they're pretty similar in function to brake pads/rotors) that each composition has benefits and drawbacks in each category. Much like how F1 brake pads don't work until they're hot, or metallic pads like to eat rotors.
Get me up to speed? This should be an engaging conversation. Get it... engaging. Clutch joke.