speirmoor said:
The cable I got from OldBritts was larger in diameter than its replacement. I dont know if it was one of the teflon ones or not but clutch pull is the same (3 fingers)
Although a nice Teflon cable is helpful, it's only about 5% of an easy pull clutch remedy.
Here is the not so secret answers that everyone seem to complicate. Hopefully this will keep you from breaking cable.
My clutch diaphragm is ever so slightly beyond flat and shows slightly bowed (convex) at rest and will go even more convex when the clutch lever is pulled in.
If your diaphragm is flat or entering to a concave position then the clutch gets harder to pull having to bring it from concave past flat to convex where it releases. A really hard to pull clutch is surely to be quite concave in appearance at rest. Stack height needs to be increased to bring the diaphragm to a more flat position.
That being said, there is a fine line here. Anything further to the convex (bowed out) region and you begin to loose clutch pressure.
This is the key.
You want the diaphragm very close to flat at rest but not quite (ever so slightly bowed(convex)).
This, of course, is where everyone speaks of stack height to archive this diaphragm position and how the diaphragm relates to the machined raised portion of the pressure plate where its effects are applied.
In addition, as a clutch wears this convex(somewhat) position will eventually become flat and go to a concave (harder to pull) position. This is where I get new clutch plates and all is well again.
Piece of cake.
http://atlanticgreen.com/ndnsclutch.htm