finless
New member
OK... Here is where I am coming from with this question.
For years on my VW's and even a 2004 Mazda PU truck, I never downshifted and just used the breaks. I only used the clutch on certain shifting needs and in fact did not use the clutch at all shifting from 2>5 when just being in normal conditions like getting on the freeway!
My clutches on these cars outlasted the engine! We are talking over 200+K miles and then some! I noticed my SM5 will easily shift from 2>5 without the clutch if I time the throttle and shift lever properly. In fact I can get less of a "shift clunk" from 2nd to 3rd than with using the clutch!
So I have always used the theory that it is cheaper to do break jobs than pull the engine for a clutch job! In fact the VW "dummy book" taught me this about 35 years ago. It has worked for me for my other vehicles and in fact was far cheaper doing break jobs long term than a clutch job! Heck only every 2nd break pad replacement did I even get the rotors turned as long as they looked good which most the time they DID!
So onto the Spyder.... And I have a SM5 so I can choose when to downshift. But this might also apply to the SE5 on manual downshifting?
The question:
Is it cheaper and easier to do a break job on a Spyder? Or is it cheaper and easier to do a clutch job?
I am asking this for both DIY and dealer cost.
Maybe Nancystoys can chime in on this if he would.
Thanks,
Bob
For years on my VW's and even a 2004 Mazda PU truck, I never downshifted and just used the breaks. I only used the clutch on certain shifting needs and in fact did not use the clutch at all shifting from 2>5 when just being in normal conditions like getting on the freeway!
My clutches on these cars outlasted the engine! We are talking over 200+K miles and then some! I noticed my SM5 will easily shift from 2>5 without the clutch if I time the throttle and shift lever properly. In fact I can get less of a "shift clunk" from 2nd to 3rd than with using the clutch!
So I have always used the theory that it is cheaper to do break jobs than pull the engine for a clutch job! In fact the VW "dummy book" taught me this about 35 years ago. It has worked for me for my other vehicles and in fact was far cheaper doing break jobs long term than a clutch job! Heck only every 2nd break pad replacement did I even get the rotors turned as long as they looked good which most the time they DID!
So onto the Spyder.... And I have a SM5 so I can choose when to downshift. But this might also apply to the SE5 on manual downshifting?
The question:
Is it cheaper and easier to do a break job on a Spyder? Or is it cheaper and easier to do a clutch job?
I am asking this for both DIY and dealer cost.
Maybe Nancystoys can chime in on this if he would.
Thanks,
Bob
Last edited: