Hello all....I have been tackling a clutch cable problem and finally closing in on a solution....but my existing failed cable is so stubborn upon removal that it seems that the inner cable is welded to the outer housing....I have heard about the clutch cable becoming the ground for the car and I wonder how often this occurs and what are the symptoms?? I would like to prevent this from occurring while I am in clutch cable repair mode....thank you very much!!
gg
Make sure the trans to body ground is clean and good and if you switched from fuel injection to carbs make sure that you add a engine to body ground. There is a good place on the fan shroud to put a bolt on top
Electricity will take the path of least resistance
Yup, it usually doesn't provide a ground unless the regular chassis grounds are f***ed. Say, if someone doesn't remember to reconnect the transmission ground strap. Or there's significant corrosion in the strap or the grounding stud.
--DD
Common, it happened to me. Just make sure your ground strap is making good contact, and replace it if it looks crappy.
Easy simple solution that should be part of your spring ritual to check before the drive season.
I was very good at replacing the clutch assembly in a 914 years ago. I had a 75 nepal orange car sold (this was 1979) and told the customer I would install a new clutch. Had the job done in less than an hour. The engine was slow to crank, so I put a battery charger booster on it, was still slow and then I noticed smoke coming from the cockpit! Forgot to attach the rear trans ground strap, the engine sought the accelerator cable as the ground and melted it in the center tunnel accelerator tube.
Well for the rest of the weekend I was busy cutting the tube out of the center tunnel and replacing it. Learned a very good lesson
Thank you all...it is all making sense to me....my clutch cable seems to be JB Welded in place....I am sure loving my borescope as it provides so much info instead of guessing...plus my hands are like catcher's mitts so getting in tight places is not so easy. I will inspect the ground cable when I install the clutch cable. Do all of the other brown wire grounds do enough grounding or is the tranny ground the big daddy? Thank you guys,
gg
I'm a huge believer in excess grounds.
I've never seen too many grounds do anything bad.
I once had a 79 Fiat X19 that went 80K without electrical issues.
I bet I added 20 different grounds to that vehicle...
Overkill, but it worked great!
Lots of cars have extra ground cables to the hood/engine cover.
As there is no electrical devices on these body panels, I've always wondered what the real reason is. I'm guessing stray voltage from electrical devices in the engine compartment but am not completely sure.
Extra, un-necessary grounds are a good thing in my book...
Thank you all....so is there a way to test the ground strap to see if it is any good? What makes it deteriorate anyway? Why and how does this negative phenomenon occur anyhow? Thank you again...
gg
I think along with hood straps the metal that it attaches to need a to be clean. Stainless wire brush is a good way to ensure this. You can even use something like corrosion x as a way to preserve the connection
Hello fellow clutch cable grounders.....do you think the old tranny ground strap had anything to do with my clutch cable freezing up? I can't wait to put the new one on today !! Does anyone suggest using copper washers and/or nuts? Serrated washers? How about battery terminal spray on the studs? Thank you all and Happy Thanksgiving !
gg
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