I have often wondered why no one is using a hydraulic setup on their manual conversions. You mount the slave cylinder; make sure the clutch pedal can actuate it and you’re done. (basically) No cutting the dash, no worrying about how stiff the clutch is. And I have often wondered why Ford did use them on the more mustangs. In the late 90's at least they used a hydraulic setup on V-6's, so? Can anyone provide any insight as to why?
I have wanted to do manual swap for awhile now, but was afraid that I would have to run something stronger than a T-5, due to the inherent extra torque the 351W makes. But I guess you would be limited to actually getting that torque applied; the tires would have to hold the torque before it would hurt the transmission. Sounds like it maybe a do able thing, as long as I don't drop the clutch at 4500rpm on drag slicks.
I have wanted to do manual swap for awhile now, but was afraid that I would have to run something stronger than a T-5, due to the inherent extra torque the 351W makes. But I guess you would be limited to actually getting that torque applied; the tires would have to hold the torque before it would hurt the transmission. Sounds like it maybe a do able thing, as long as I don't drop the clutch at 4500rpm on drag slicks.
Comment