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Duralast Clutches


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Has anyone used a duralast replacement clutch or know someone who has? I wanna know how long they last because my throwout bearing exploded saturday night and I'm gonna finish putting the transmission back in this afternoon. I paid $157 for it from Autozone, so I don't think I was robbed.

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I have an AZ clutch in my rig. It has worked just great for my daily driver use the past two years. I advise having your flywheel machined while you have everything apart.

4.0 flywheels have a curved face unlike the 2.5 and machining will remove it. The FSM recommends cleaning with 180 gritt emery cloth.

 

A Napa (Luk) clutch runs about $10 more than the Duralast. I have never run a Duralast clutch, so I am no help there.

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4.0 flywheels have a curved face unlike the 2.5 and machining will remove it. The FSM recommends cleaning with 180 gritt emery cloth.

 

A Napa (Luk) clutch runs about $10 more than the Duralast. I have never run a Duralast clutch, so I am no help there.

I wanted to use the Luk clutch kit because it was cheaper and supposedly a good kit, but I have to get this fixed before toomorrow. I'm putting the transmission (and everything else between the rear axle and the engine) back on today hopefully within 5 hours (if I don't break anything else), and I didn't machine my flywheel because it was surprisingly not that bad. I guess not machineing thi flywheel is not a bad thing after all?

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Not machining the flywheel was a good thing. The FSM very clearly says not to, and I know people who have ignored that to their detriment.

 

Just spent some time researching this two weeks ago. Only on the 4.0 are you not supposed to have the flywheel resurfaced. On the 2.5 you are.

 

And as far as the OP's original question, I put a Duralast clutch in my 2.5, but it's only been in there for a couple of days so far.

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My experience with Duralast parts is not good. Every Duralast part I have put in has failed at least once and some twice. Lifetime guarantee don't worry, right. Changing failed parts is a pain in the A$$.

NO SH*t, I put the whole damn thing together last night and the seals in the lines of the brand new throwout bearing inside the (Peugeot) transmission bursted. I had to use my old lines in the new throwout bearing but it came with 4 new o-rings and 2 new u-shaped clips for the line swap. I put the two o-rings in, slide the metal line in, then put the little u-shaped clip over it. Did I do it right? I thought that's how it looked when I pulled the old lines out of the old throwout bearing.

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