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Hyundai I40 Clutch Problems
I purchased a Hyundai i40 last May when it was 6 months old. Shortly after the purchase I noticed problems putting the car into gear. At first it happened only occasionally but now it's very frequent. The most difficult gear is 1st. Although I push the clutch down to the floor it is awful. Can anyone advise as to the problem and what to do to resolve it. I like the car but I am seriously considering selling it. Thanks
Answers
A cautionary tale: I had a similar problem when I had a Citroen BX. The garage said that I'd need to have the clutch replaced and, since that involved removing the whole of the suspension, it would involve 8½ hours labour and therefore cost a small fortune. However it was a good car and I agreed to have the work done. A few days after the new clutch had been fitted...
10:35 Thu 08th Jan 2015
A cautionary tale:
I had a similar problem when I had a Citroen BX. The garage said that I'd need to have the clutch replaced and, since that involved removing the whole of the suspension, it would involve 8½ hours labour and therefore cost a small fortune. However it was a good car and I agreed to have the work done.
A few days after the new clutch had been fitted however, I encountered further problems getting the car into gear. The garage made an adjustment and said that everything should be OK.
A few days later I was back at the garage with the same problem again. They eventually diagnosed the problem as a small L-shaped connector at the end of the clutch cable that had started to split (so that the two arms were no longer at 90 degrees to each other). They hammered it back into shape and welded it together, thus fixing the problem.
It was only when I was driving away from the garage that I realised I'd forked out hundreds of pounds to have a (totally unnecessary) new clutch fitted when all that been needed was a 5-minute job with a hammer and a welding torch! (That was the last time that I ever used that garage!).
So, please, please, please don't let anyone try to tell you that you need a new clutch until they've checked:
(a) the cable ; and
(b) the fittings at the end of it.
My guess is that your clutch cable has simply stretched and that fitting a new one (cheap part, minimal labour) will solve the problem.
I had a similar problem when I had a Citroen BX. The garage said that I'd need to have the clutch replaced and, since that involved removing the whole of the suspension, it would involve 8½ hours labour and therefore cost a small fortune. However it was a good car and I agreed to have the work done.
A few days after the new clutch had been fitted however, I encountered further problems getting the car into gear. The garage made an adjustment and said that everything should be OK.
A few days later I was back at the garage with the same problem again. They eventually diagnosed the problem as a small L-shaped connector at the end of the clutch cable that had started to split (so that the two arms were no longer at 90 degrees to each other). They hammered it back into shape and welded it together, thus fixing the problem.
It was only when I was driving away from the garage that I realised I'd forked out hundreds of pounds to have a (totally unnecessary) new clutch fitted when all that been needed was a 5-minute job with a hammer and a welding torch! (That was the last time that I ever used that garage!).
So, please, please, please don't let anyone try to tell you that you need a new clutch until they've checked:
(a) the cable ; and
(b) the fittings at the end of it.
My guess is that your clutch cable has simply stretched and that fitting a new one (cheap part, minimal labour) will solve the problem.
-- answer removed --
....and we haven't been told if the car was affected with this "anomaly" when it was originally purchased at 6 months....and we haven't been told
if the OP constantly rides the clutch ....and we haven't been told much else. So, in the absence of this information, there's little point in guessing any more.
if the OP constantly rides the clutch ....and we haven't been told much else. So, in the absence of this information, there's little point in guessing any more.
Just purchased a 2013 i40 Estate with one previous owner (Leasing company) with 60K on the clock and it had the same "clutch on the floor" problem. The selling garage said the master cylinder needed bleeding.... what rubbish. Visited the main Hyundai dealer and after describing the problem got no more than "clutch is like an on off switch" when they immediately booked it in to have new clutch fitted. Picked it up this morning and it is perfect. Nice one Hyundai and not a penny to pay as it is under their 5 year warranty. However, why wasn't there a general recall for this obvious design problem.
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