Jump to content

IGNORED

Slave cylinder hose gasket?


78sid

Recommended Posts

I've got a leak that on the hydraulic hose mating to my clutch slave cylinder. It appears to be metal on metal. Should there be a gasket of some sorts? Seem obvious, but I wanted to make sure I'm not missing something else.

Thanks.

Edited by 78sid
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The fitting on the slave cylinder is a straight thread, not a taper, (I just looked at my spare cylinder) with no seat for a flared tube end either. Seems like it would benefit from a washer unless they did some precise machining on the flat seating surfaces. Maybe the factory parts are of higher quality than aftermarket. My car came with a copper crush washer, although I don't know if it's stock. And good old carpartsmanual.com shows a washer, but, oddly, it's on the end of the hose that does have the typical brake line flare fitting.

Why the "please" on no washer?

Datsun 240Z/260Z/280Z Clutch Control Hose

and Nisan sells the hose washer

GASKET-HOS :: Nissan Parts, NISMO and Nissan Accessories - Courtesyparts.com

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm going give it a good torque and see if it is dry in the morning. If it still leaks, I'll try a washer. If that doesn't work, I'll start over. Not a huge expense either way.

I'll update my results.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The fitting on the slave cylinder is a straight thread, not a taper, (I just looked at my spare cylinder) with no seat for a flared tube end either. Seems like it would benefit from a washer unless they did some precise machining on the flat seating surfaces. Maybe the factory parts are of higher quality than aftermarket. My car came with a copper crush washer, although I don't know if it's stock. And good old carpartsmanual.com shows a washer, but, oddly, it's on the end of the hose that does have the typical brake line flare fitting.

Why the "please" on no washer?

Datsun 240Z/260Z/280Z Clutch Control Hose

and Nisan sells the hose washer

GASKET-HOS :: Nissan Parts, NISMO and Nissan Accessories - Courtesyparts.com

Because it shouldn't leak as designed, as you can see in the drawings that you provided. If it's leaking, something's wrong.

That other washer is very likely used for load distribution, NOT sealing pressurized hydraulic fluid.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ah, the engineer's esthetic (no offense, I feel the same). Unfortunately for us, aftermarket parts are usually not as-designed. Just sayin', it's one of those realities.

Anyway, to the PO, you might check under the rubber boot for fluid. It might be the cylinder itself that is leaking.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Every slave cylinder I have taken on and off used a copper crush washer to seal. Go to the hardware store and get one.

Looking through my factory manuals, '82 zx, '79 620 and '73 240z. The 620 manual shows a washer at the slave although it isn't named but can see it in an assembled drawing. The '73 doesn't show or say anything about the washer. Mine did have a copper washer and it was all stock.

The '82 zx service manual shows a washer for the slave and recommends use a new one when replacing parts.

Edited by Darrel
more info
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I agree. The threads aren't tapered, there's no way I would want the steel shoulder of the hose end fitting trying to dig into and seal against the body of the slave cylinder. I think there's supposed to be a somewhat malleable washer in there.

As for that washer in the pic, I think it's a typo. I think they showed it at the wrong end of the hose. There's absolutely no reason for it where they have it shown. The end of the hose is held in place with the typical clip-in-groove, and the sealing is done by the flare on the end of the hard line.

The only thing a washer would do at that end is get in the way of the two flats on the hose fitting that are there to keep the hoes end from turning as you tighten the hard line. :bulb:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I found it. Page CL-9 of the 78 manual... Top right:

Install clutch hose on operating cylinder with a gasket in place. Note: Use new gasket.

(Or CL-8 of the 77 manual. I didn't look earlier than that, but I assume they're all the same.)

Edited by Captain Obvious
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Guidelines. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.