2004 Evolutiion!!!!!
Originally posted by ZooRacer
dere are 2 evos that are in my town....a high school who i believe is 17....which i think burned his clutch about 8000 miles...and dere is dis old guy driving a yellow evo...who hasnt burned his clutch and he is at 28,000 miles... u see the difference in the driver and experience!
dere are 2 evos that are in my town....a high school who i believe is 17....which i think burned his clutch about 8000 miles...and dere is dis old guy driving a yellow evo...who hasnt burned his clutch and he is at 28,000 miles... u see the difference in the driver and experience!
put a restrictor on the clutch slowing and delaying the enguagement. If you release the clutch like any other normal cars driving 8K miles in the big city will wear out. Fighting thru traffic and reving towards the no lag zone is the trick. I dont' hear STi having the same problem and they have more power so i beileve it's a design flaw.
Originally posted by gtr
I disagree. I couldn't wear the clutch out before 20K miles on a 02 WRX if i wanted too. It seems that
put a restrictor on the clutch slowing and delaying the enguagement. If you release the clutch like any other normal cars driving 8K miles in the big city will wear out. Fighting thru traffic and reving towards the no lag zone is the trick. I dont' hear STi having the same problem and they have more power so i beileve it's a design flaw.
I disagree. I couldn't wear the clutch out before 20K miles on a 02 WRX if i wanted too. It seems that
put a restrictor on the clutch slowing and delaying the enguagement. If you release the clutch like any other normal cars driving 8K miles in the big city will wear out. Fighting thru traffic and reving towards the no lag zone is the trick. I dont' hear STi having the same problem and they have more power so i beileve it's a design flaw.
There are four reasons why we aren't hearing about the STi's clutch or tranny:
1.) They don't have the restrictor
2.) They have shorter gearing
3.) Smaller tires
4.) Much more power lower in the rpms
The real question is how will their tranny/drivetrain hold up over time. So far it's been really good.
I've got 15k on my EVO with no problems and about 90% of my driving is city. But, I'm also not at the drag strip every weekend.
Originally posted by gtr
If you release the clutch like any other normal cars driving 8K miles in the big city will wear out. Fighting thru traffic and reving towards the no lag zone is the trick.
If you release the clutch like any other normal cars driving 8K miles in the big city will wear out. Fighting thru traffic and reving towards the no lag zone is the trick.
Last edited by AbusiveWombat; Mar 18, 2004 at 09:03 AM.
Originally posted by AbusiveWombat
Could you explain this a bit more clearly? Are you saying that most cars will wear the clutch out in 8k miles of city driving?
Could you explain this a bit more clearly? Are you saying that most cars will wear the clutch out in 8k miles of city driving?
The strange thing is that the a lot of first batch people including myself that has experenced premature clutch wear. The stock car tends to lag so i do rev it higher than normal to accel when going onto traffic which might be the problem. But my arguement is that I have not had any clutch issues with the WRX and i'm sure It was driven much harder due to the huge turbo lag.
Originally posted by gtr
Sorry if i wasn't clear. I mean driving a WRX, STi, or Eclipse GSX the same way it will outlast the Evo's clutch life. This is my whole point. IF driven the same way, other clutches will last longer than evos. Doesn't that mean the evo's clutch was not designed as well?
Sorry if i wasn't clear. I mean driving a WRX, STi, or Eclipse GSX the same way it will outlast the Evo's clutch life. This is my whole point. IF driven the same way, other clutches will last longer than evos. Doesn't that mean the evo's clutch was not designed as well?
But on the same note, when I hear about all these guys droppin' the clutch at 6k rpms repeatedly, I can't help but think that a lot of the clutch issues are driver related. You can't expect a car to be completely bullet proof. I don't think any car's clutch can hold up very long to 6k rpm drops. That's why I'm a little surprized that the STi's are holding up. I would imagine that some sort of drivetrain weakness would pop up. But the STi's are still fairly new, so I guess we'll have to see how they age and how they hold up when they get a better after market.
Originally posted by gtr
The strange thing is that the a lot of first batch people including myself that has experenced premature clutch wear. The stock car tends to lag so i do rev it higher than normal to accel when going onto traffic which might be the problem. But my arguement is that I have not had any clutch issues with the WRX and i'm sure It was driven much harder due to the huge turbo lag.
The strange thing is that the a lot of first batch people including myself that has experenced premature clutch wear. The stock car tends to lag so i do rev it higher than normal to accel when going onto traffic which might be the problem. But my arguement is that I have not had any clutch issues with the WRX and i'm sure It was driven much harder due to the huge turbo lag.
Turbo lag makes me wanna rev it higher and ride the clutch to get the car moving. The riding of the clutch causes the faster wear. My friend's STi had dumped the clucth numberous times and reaching 20K miles with no problems. So far it just seems that the STI drive train is superior in strength in clutch and tranny.
I can't be bothered to think my cluch will wear fast. I just wanna go out and drive without worrying about clutch, trans, and etc. Perhaps i need something like a GT3 and not have to worry about clutch, trans and so forth.
I can't be bothered to think my cluch will wear fast. I just wanna go out and drive without worrying about clutch, trans, and etc. Perhaps i need something like a GT3 and not have to worry about clutch, trans and so forth.
Originally posted by AbusiveWombat
That's why I'm a little surprized that the STi's are holding up. I would imagine that some sort of drivetrain weakness would pop up. But the STi's are still fairly new, so I guess we'll have to see how they age and how they hold up when they get a better after market.
That's why I'm a little surprized that the STi's are holding up. I would imagine that some sort of drivetrain weakness would pop up. But the STi's are still fairly new, so I guess we'll have to see how they age and how they hold up when they get a better after market.
Originally posted by Daveyd
Well seeing how this topic has been discussed 45 bizillion times...uh, yea that's it!!
Looks like only optional leather seats, LSD on the RS and optional 6 disc cd changer
Well seeing how this topic has been discussed 45 bizillion times...uh, yea that's it!!
Looks like only optional leather seats, LSD on the RS and optional 6 disc cd changer
Originally posted by EVO Neil
The stereo option for 2004 is an Infinity 315-watt stereo 7-speaker with trunk-mounted subwoofer.
The stereo option for 2004 is an Infinity 315-watt stereo 7-speaker with trunk-mounted subwoofer.
Originally posted by gtr
I can't be bothered to think my cluch will wear fast. I just wanna go out and drive without worrying about clutch, trans, and etc. Perhaps i need something like a GT3 and not have to worry about clutch, trans and so forth.
I can't be bothered to think my cluch will wear fast. I just wanna go out and drive without worrying about clutch, trans, and etc. Perhaps i need something like a GT3 and not have to worry about clutch, trans and so forth.
One thing to keep in mind is with all the modified EVO's around here with 300+ whp and the tuners with 400+ whp, I have not heard of any transmission, diff, or axle problems. That to me is stellar.
Originally posted by tryandcatchme
This wouldent surprise me....
If Mitsubishi wants to sell more evo's, they should offer an RSII packaged car.
This wouldent surprise me....
If Mitsubishi wants to sell more evo's, they should offer an RSII packaged car.
Evolved Member
iTrader: (3)
Joined: Apr 2003
Posts: 1,907
Likes: 0
From: dublin, oxford, chillicothe OH
Originally posted by ZooRacer
now the clutch is a great clutch...but most of the people who ruin there clutches happen to be young guys who race them on the track....you can read it lout and clear in the warranty manual....i dont even have any warranties left on mah car....
dere are 2 evos that are in my town....a high school who i believe is 17....which i think burned his clutch about 8000 miles...and dere is dis old guy driving a yellow evo...who hasnt burned his clutch and he is at 28,000 miles... u see the difference in the driver and experience!
now the clutch is a great clutch...but most of the people who ruin there clutches happen to be young guys who race them on the track....you can read it lout and clear in the warranty manual....i dont even have any warranties left on mah car....
dere are 2 evos that are in my town....a high school who i believe is 17....which i think burned his clutch about 8000 miles...and dere is dis old guy driving a yellow evo...who hasnt burned his clutch and he is at 28,000 miles... u see the difference in the driver and experience!
(back on topic)
So will people have to wait until the 04's hit dealers in order to see the leather option? It seems like no one can get any pics.
STOCK CLUTCH SUCKS!!
Originally posted by ZooRacer
now the clutch is a great clutch...but most of the people who ruin there clutches happen to be young guys who race them on the track....you can read it lout and clear in the warranty manual....i dont even have any warranties left on mah car....
dere are 2 evos that are in my town....a high school who i believe is 17....which i think burned his clutch about 8000 miles...and dere is dis old guy driving a yellow evo...who hasnt burned his clutch and he is at 28,000 miles... u see the difference in the driver and experience!
now the clutch is a great clutch...but most of the people who ruin there clutches happen to be young guys who race them on the track....you can read it lout and clear in the warranty manual....i dont even have any warranties left on mah car....
dere are 2 evos that are in my town....a high school who i believe is 17....which i think burned his clutch about 8000 miles...and dere is dis old guy driving a yellow evo...who hasnt burned his clutch and he is at 28,000 miles... u see the difference in the driver and experience!
In Engineering and design, there is what is none as a safety factor (over building for the use). This is where the Evo's OEM clutch lacks. With proper safety factor built in, the hard driver gets 36000 miles and the normal driver gets near 100,000 miles. Dont blame it ALL on the DRIVER!! Put some blame where the fault is. You didn't see these problems on the DSM's. The were designed with the proper safety factor for the HP that the cars where making.
-B
Albeit somewhat off topic but I'm 18, the EVO is my first manual transmission car and my stock clutch is fine at over 13k miles. The clutch issue to me is partly a product of abuse and may be influenced by a manufacturing defect in some cars. My cars a June build date and I've had 0 problems that a full break in hasn't taken care of.
Originally posted by gtr
That sounds great. I wonder what the new stereo looks like and if the 04's will have double dins or not?
That sounds great. I wonder what the new stereo looks like and if the 04's will have double dins or not?
Last edited by EVO Neil; Mar 18, 2004 at 03:25 PM.



