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I recently acquired my dream car (72 Pantera) and it grinds badly going into 2nd and sometimes 3rd gear. I attended a Pantera gathering this past weekend and had some very knowledgeble people look at my car and even adjust the turnbuckle. Still grinds. The person I bought it from says it didn't do it prior to having the clutch replaced. One guy said to check "the pin" to make sure it is moving properly side to side -where is said pin? I figured it was back under the cover with the reverse switch but thought I would ask. Anyone have any other ideas or suggestions? I have resigned myself to the thought that it needs "freshened up" but thought I would see if I have overlooked something. I think I got a really great car for the price -just some small things to iron out.
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Insure the clutch is disengaging completely:

(1) the clearance between slave & arm is not too great.

(2) the clutch system is bled completely (no residual air)

(3) there is nothing between the clutch pedal & floorboard (carpeting, floor mat) that would prevent you from pushing it all the way to the floor.

(4) the seat is far enough forward that you can depress the pedal completely too.

(5) Some clutches will require the "long throw" slave.

Your friend on the DTBB
PD, You can kinda tell....if your clutch pedal disenguages close to the floor, or your car creeps, you are not disenguaging enough. My third gear also has a slight crunch when shifting at speed. If you have short ttravel and mushy pedal. You need to tap on the fluid line as you bleed air out. ...How much travel?
I have almost an inch of throw -you can poke a screwdriver in and spin the clutch disk with the pedal depressed so it is disengaging all the way. One guy said I have the wrong clutch disk (too small) but also said that wasn't the problem. He said "synchros" and I believe him -just don't understand why the problem would surface just after a clutch change. The car shows 58,000 miles. It runs fantastic but shows some signs of abuse -I think you would have to be really hard on a trans to blow the synchros in 58,000 miles!

It has no problem at any speed going into first, fourth or fifth -you can sort of "feel" the synchro when downshifting to first. I don't get that feel at all in second -a little in third. I usually start out in second and carefully shift to third.

Hey Coz! Wanna do my trans?? I don't live TOO far!! Big Grin
(read how you did your own rebuild!!)
You can't guess on whether or not the clutch is fully releasing.
First of all there is no way that you should run a Long style clutch in a Pantera. The system can't travel enough for it to fully release. You definately can hurt the trannie with one as a result.
A Borg & Beck, also know as a diaphram is what you should use.
You need to measure the clearance between the flywheel and disc at full travel.
The minimum clearance for a Long is about .035".
A diaphram should be about .045".
If you don't have that you need to find out why and correct it.
Also for some undetermined reason, the 10.5" clutch works better then the 11". It holds better, it releases better, etc.
I know it doesn't make sense but it is what I have found.
I don't know if you saw my post when you first got your car.
Find out where the last owner got his clutch. If it came from an auto parts store, he may have installed the wrong clutch. If it came from a "buddy" mechanic, it may be the wrong clutch. If it came from a Pantera vendor, or was done by a Pantera specialist, then it is probably the right clutch.
A long throw slave cylinder and steel braided line may help if it is the right clutch. It did on mine. If it is the wrong clutch, then you will probably have to replace the clutch. If you need the correct clutch, or good advice, call Dennis Quella at Pantera Performance Center in Colorado. He knows his business and you'll get the straight scoop.
Later, Mooso.
It is sad when the seller fails to disclose information that can have you going in the wrong direction with a statment like "It was fine before we put the new clutch in" Now you are looking at the clutch that is probobly not the problem. Like I said mine crunches into third, but second is fine. I belive you need syncronizers too. You can inspect all your clutch stuff while you have the tranny out.
After having my ZF rebuilt and installing the correct clutch, mine still exibited intermittant grinding going into 2nd and 3rd. It was solved by replacing the clutch slave with a long throw slave and the plastic line with a steel line.
I'm not suggesting replacing the clutch. I'm suggesting finding out what the clutch is and where it came from.
If it is the right clutch, then the new slave may help. The long throw slave changed the clutch release point on my car as well. The release used to be down toword the floor. Now it releases in the middle of the peddle throw. Much nicer to drive this way.
If your ZF needs rebuilt, then there's no way around it, but if the problem is the wrong clutch or you need more release actuation from your slave, you're going to save a lot of dough by not jumping into a ZF rebuild. If you've never hidden a thing from your wife before...you're gonna want to hide the cost of a ZF rebuild from her.
Last PB brings up a good point with air in the slave system. I've heard stories where guys really fought air bubbles trapped in the slave cylinder and line after a clutch replacement. Also, any sign of fluid leaking from the slave line or cylinder could also indicate air being drawn in. Be sure these components are tight and carefully bleed the cylinder. Tapping on it helps any bubbles to rise to the top.
If your clutch master cylinder seals are bad you will not get full actuation pressure and less than full disengagement. Any fluid leakage around the master cylinder could indicate air getting into the system there.
I think you have to start at the peddle and shift knob and just carefully inspect everything in the clutch and shifting systems.
Somehow we'll get to the bottom of this.
It has no problem at any speed going into first, fourth or fifth -you can sort of "feel" the synchro when downshifting to first. I don't get that feel at all in second -a little in third. I usually start out in second and carefully shift to third. This statment says to me...The linkage is ok, He can spin the disc.. That is loose. My car only has 62G, I can still live with my slight grind, Your probobly going to want to call a vender. I know PIM has one, ask for Jerry. Of course Lloyd Butfoy

Hey Coz! Wanna do my trans?? I don't live TOO far!! Big Grin
(read how you did your own rebuild!!)[/QUOTE]
Sychros are around $300 each for this trannie. The gasket kit is $300. Gears are $900 each.
If there is wear, hopefully it is the sychro and not the gear.
What happens is that when you push on the gear lever, it pushes the synchro against the gear and it works like a break to slow down the spinning gear. When the two are coordinated or synchronized the slider is able to lock the gear to the mainshaft.
Reverse or second gear in almost all manual transmissions are what have the most grinding problems. Reverse has no synchro. One can normally use second gear to slow the spinning down, by shifting into second first, to engauge reverse without grinding.
2nd is the largest gear on the cluster and has the most mass.
That makes it the most difficult to slow down.
The synchro is supposed to be the fuseable link, meaning the cheap replacement part.
The gear hat already is very polished from the machining process to begin with.
The synchro is the female component corresponding to the hat on the gear. When it becomes polished then you loose the breaking effect of the synchro. Kinda like glazed brakes. They very rarely completly fail. They are geneally a fancy manganese-bronze alloy.
Since synchros work on a frictional basis,
and sometimes when synthetic lube is used it is too slick. It doesn't permit the necessary friction for the synchro to work properly.
Sometimes by simply returning to the original petrolium gear lube, the problem is solved. Sometimes.
What lube works best is a function of the synchro design itself.
The BW T10 synchros which are also used in the Doug Nash and the Richmond, Supper T10's are like this. They don't work as well as they should with synthetic gear lube. The real problem is that they are too small for the size of the gear they are supposed to slow down. They are used because of the price. They are less then $10 each.
Thanks for all the replies!!!

I have determined that the clutch is fully disengaging -I really think the second gear synchro is gone and I think third can't be far behind. I have no idea if the ring gear is safety wired either so I think the right choice is to have the trans gone through and freshened up a bit. I was going to just check the fluid level but I don't have an allen wrench that fits the fill or drain plug -anyone have any idea what size it takes? English or metric?
quote:
Originally posted by Panteradreamin:
Thanks for all the replies!!!

I have determined that the clutch is fully disengaging -I really think the second gear synchro is gone and I think third can't be far behind. I have no idea if the ring gear is safety wired either so I think the right choice is to have the trans gone through and freshened up a bit. I was going to just check the fluid level but I don't have an allen wrench that fits the fill or drain plug -anyone have any idea what size it takes? English or metric?


I believe that it is 17mm. You can get it just about anywhere now that has a good selection of tools, like Sears, as an allen socket but you will have to shorten it with a grindstone.
Pantera ZF synchros are steel. Porsche ZF synchros are bronze.
Don't feel alone. When I bought my car it had a grind going into 2nd. The former owner said the shift linkage was just a little out of adjustment. I didn't know anything about Panteras so I believed him. My ZF cost $4600 to rebuild.
That's why I was hoping it was the clutch in your case. Looks like it's going to have to come out.
Sorry.
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