SafeSpeed wrote:
Big Tone wrote:
What I have noticed, and I hope I don't get an e-slap for it, is women holding the car on the clutch.
I do that.

Not for long periods, certainly, but quite frequently.
But the thing is that I have never worn out a clutch in any car I've ever owned. And I've owned quite a few for 60,000 miles or more. I purchased one car with the clutch already slipping. I've had a couple of precautionary new clutches when gearboxes have come out, and one where an oil seal failure caused the clutch to become, er, moist.
I reckon clutches are tougher than you're giving them credit for.
Good of ya to put yer hand up. I actually do it myself if I can see I'm only going to be a second or so but my honeybunchkins is happy to just sit there for a minute or two in a traffic jam before she'll resort to the brake instead. Something which I often observe others doing too.
I'm sure you're right that they're built stronger these days and maybe you only use the bare minimum revs to get the car going, but they do still go eventually unless treated with care. It's something which only shows itself after very high mileage but even so, it is a big and expensive job when it does eventually go.
Also, despite what anyone says, no-one puts a clutch in quite like the manufacturer. I speak from experience. I'd rather my clutch was fitted on a Japanese production line by robots than Mike the mechanic down the road.
It does depend on how often and how heavily it's done and you're probably quite a light clutch slipping sort of guy, as opposed to the higher rev person while edging back and forth in the traffic or at the lights.
I think it also depends on the type of car.
My old Mazda, and Mazda's in general I think, almost seem to have the 1st and reverse gears back to front. i.e. 1st gear barely gets you moving whereas reverse can practically get you up to the NSP or so it feels. If you're trying to reverse up a steep driveway it can be quite a challenge. I'm sure there's method in their madness and I wonder if the reason is that the lower that 1st gear is, the less strain there will be on the clutch. I don't know if that's their idea but on Mazda's it's really just a gear to get the car moving rather than get it up to any real speed.
Any car mechanics out there?