- May 19, 2012
- 20
Thanks for the reply, I sent you a PM with my cell phone as well.The clutch rollover sound is very distinctive - some have compared to a box of rocks. It is caused by natural engine harmonics causing vibration sounds in the unloaded gears of the transmission. The Ricardo is pretty well known for this. That said, it is NOT a squealing sound. I do hope it is the rollover noise.
I've heard of a customer with a similar but much more pronounced screaching noise. As he describes, it was very bad. It was caused by one of the clutch discs being installed backwards. This is quite easy to do if you are not paying very attention to the explicit markings on the discs themselves.
Here is a video of the sound:
Here's what we know.
A. Car got a brand new transaxle, clutch assembly, firewall from Ford. Transaxle came filled with fluid, clutch had a new TOB pre-installed.
1. This was after 4 drive cycles, it was fine before.
2. This sound happens parked, is not generally rpm dependant (hard to hear)
3. This sound happens in all 7 gears while parked.
4. This sound ONLY happens when the clutch is 100% hard to the floor. If you pull out to 90% pedal, the sound goes away nearly completely.
5. The sound dissappears slowly after lifting the pedal. Moving the shifter changes the tone.
6. When I was driving back to the shop, the car was hard to shift from a dead stop. Smooth on highway.
My guess is the clutch is somehow over disengaging. My mechanic thinks it's possible I bent the pedal assembly bracket. At the moment, we are considering a rubber grommet as a pedal stop.
If the clutch pulls out too far, the clutch fingers will rub and potentially keep the input shaft spinning. That's the theory