<font size="2"><font face="Comic Sans MS">I been thinking about the shortcomings of the design of the clutch fork and ball pivot, fitted to our cars.
It really is a crap piece of design.
Perhaps the ball pivot arrangement could be replaced with a bearing mount that a new design of fork could pivot on, something a bit like a roller rocker pedestal.
It could use sealed bearings or bushing.
The fork arm would have a proper method of retaining the clutch slave cylinder push rod, instead of the stupid set up we have now that can allow the push rod to fall off whist replacing the slave cyl, necessitating the removal of the gearbox for the rods reinstatement!
The fork arm and pedestal would need to be cast, forged or machined from a billet instead of the awful bit of pressed tinware we have now.
I realise that this wouldn't be commercially viable these days, but the engineer in me just keeps on wanting to eliminate bad design.</font id="Comic Sans MS"></font id="size2">
"Keep calm, relax, focus on the problem & PULL THE BLOODY TRIGGER"
80'Triumph TR7, 73'Land Rover (Ford 351. V8),
'89 Ford Fairlane
'98 MG-F, 69'Ford F250.
76' Ford F100