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245 "eating' clutches 200 1984

Morning:

I have an '84 245 that has been, for the last several years, "eating" its clutches. Those pressure plates must be awfully tasty....

The car has just a hair over 300K miles on it. The original clutch started slipping and was replaced in 2007 at 220K miles. Since then, I have replaced the clutch FOUR times, averaging about 20K on each clutch. My driving style has not changed and I have been driving a "stick" since the 70s (started with a three-on-the-tree).

What's happened each time is that the clutch felt normal for about 2-2 1/2 years, and then suddenly, almost over night, the engagement point was right off the floor. Eventually, the clutch became permanently engaged, such that even with the clutch pedal pushed to the floor the car would creep forward in 1st gear if I did not keep my foot on the brake. Shifting is not impossible but extremely difficult.

I've done two of the clutch jobs myself. The last two were done by a reputable independent Volvo shop here in town. All four times, the pressure plate, clutch disc, t/o bearing and pilot bearing were replaced. I did not resurface the flywheel but the indy shop did on the last two clutch jobs.

I'm at the end of my rope here. Having to replace the clutch every 2-3 years is not only abnormal, it is expensive.

Any thoughts? Just poor quality replacement parts? I used Sachs kits purchased through iPd and the indy shop assured me that they used "OEM" parts (but they did not specify the brand).

Thanks.








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    245 "eating' clutches 200 1984

    I"m curious about what is failing. Those symptoms usually mean the clutch disk is severely worn or the clutch cable is too tight. I assume you tried adjusting the cable.

    From my experience driving 240s, it is the pressure plate that usually fails first (after a lot of miles) and you get slippage like you had on your original clutch. The disks seem to last forever unless they are abused, the clutch cable is too loose and the clutch drags all the time, or they get contaminated with oil from a leaking main seal.








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      245 "eating' clutches 200 1984

      I'd be curious to know what the discs looked like on removal. If they have any "meat" left on them they should still be serviceable. If the car is creeping with the pedal depressed I would suspect either the cable having been stretched/frayed (as your original clutch lasted a good number of miles that means you were driving a long time with a heavy pedal - it gets harder to press as the clutch wears) or the clutch fork has bent (so as the new clutch wears the fork can't compensate). I know Volvo revised the fork on 140 models as the early design did bend - not enough to actually see. I'm not aware of that problem with the M45/46 but it is a possibility and may be worth pursuing. - Dave








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        245 "eating' clutches 200 1984

        Yeah just realized I got that backwards. If the clutch pedal engages near the floor when the cable is loose right? All I know is that I usually get it backwards when I adjust the cable and the adjustment mechanism does not work very well.







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