XJ Dreamin'
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Huntsville, Texas
I was driving tractors and an old '51 IH pickup long before my formal street training. For that, Dad put me in the VW bug. First, starting in 2nd on gravel, without burning the clutch or throwing gravel. Second, starting on a gravel incline (RR crossing) in 1st, without burning the clutch and without throwing gravel. Third, upshift. Fourth, downshift. Fifth, compression braking and double-clutch downshift.
When he put me on the RR crossing I instinctively reached for the e-brake. He was waiting for me. Never use the e-brake to substitute for proper clutch slip. Proper clutch slip is, as described above, letting the clutch engage just until you feel the engine, at idle, taking the load of the vehicle. You can then move to the throttle and gentle exchange clutch for throttle. The transition should be smooth - that is, RPM should increase with vehicle speed. Opening the throttle and then bringing the clutch into that high PRM is 'slipping' the clutch, and will burn it. Engaging the clutch at idle to hold the vehicle for a couple of seconds is an acceptable clutch slip and will not burn it.
I drove a '91 5-speed XJ here on the forest for four years. It was a joy! With the synchromesh it was even possible to shift up and down without any clutch, at all (just for fun). The throw on the stick is a little long for speed shifting, but that thing down-shifted like butter. I wish I still had that one.
Have fun!
When he put me on the RR crossing I instinctively reached for the e-brake. He was waiting for me. Never use the e-brake to substitute for proper clutch slip. Proper clutch slip is, as described above, letting the clutch engage just until you feel the engine, at idle, taking the load of the vehicle. You can then move to the throttle and gentle exchange clutch for throttle. The transition should be smooth - that is, RPM should increase with vehicle speed. Opening the throttle and then bringing the clutch into that high PRM is 'slipping' the clutch, and will burn it. Engaging the clutch at idle to hold the vehicle for a couple of seconds is an acceptable clutch slip and will not burn it.
I drove a '91 5-speed XJ here on the forest for four years. It was a joy! With the synchromesh it was even possible to shift up and down without any clutch, at all (just for fun). The throw on the stick is a little long for speed shifting, but that thing down-shifted like butter. I wish I still had that one.
Have fun!