New Clutch.
Hello. I have a 1997 Audi A4 1.8l 5 speed and it needs a clutch soon. Does anyone have good directions on how to do it without a lift? Otherwise I'm assuming remove the entire engine from the front.(I have all the tools I need and have an 2 ton engine hoist) All I have for lift is a jack and jack stands. maybe get it a foot off the ground. / anyone have any ideas on clutch kits?
Clutch replacement DIY guides from AudiWorld and HappyWrenching.
As for a replacement, that will depend on your car and what you plan on doing with it and/or to it after the clutch job. For light driving on a 100% stock car I would go with a stockish clutch and pressure plate and re-use the stock flywheel. If the flywheel has a lot of hot spots on it you may be able to get it resurfaced, but I elected to go with a single mass flywheel instead. A new dual mass flywheel for your car is like $800. For higher HP applications you'll want a single mass LWFW and an appropriate clutch and pressure plate. Check out ECS Tuning or give Mike Hood a call at Ringer Racing. I got my clutch/flywheel kit from him a few years ago. Great price and Mike has been a B5 enthusiast since the turn of the century.
As for a replacement, that will depend on your car and what you plan on doing with it and/or to it after the clutch job. For light driving on a 100% stock car I would go with a stockish clutch and pressure plate and re-use the stock flywheel. If the flywheel has a lot of hot spots on it you may be able to get it resurfaced, but I elected to go with a single mass flywheel instead. A new dual mass flywheel for your car is like $800. For higher HP applications you'll want a single mass LWFW and an appropriate clutch and pressure plate. Check out ECS Tuning or give Mike Hood a call at Ringer Racing. I got my clutch/flywheel kit from him a few years ago. Great price and Mike has been a B5 enthusiast since the turn of the century.
The only problem is I installed a new engine October 2014. So I already did most new parts, Timing belt, water pump...ect
Clutch replacement DIY guides from AudiWorld and HappyWrenching.
As for a replacement, that will depend on your car and what you plan on doing with it and/or to it after the clutch job. For light driving on a 100% stock car I would go with a stockish clutch and pressure plate and re-use the stock flywheel. If the flywheel has a lot of hot spots on it you may be able to get it resurfaced, but I elected to go with a single mass flywheel instead. A new dual mass flywheel for your car is like $800. For higher HP applications you'll want a single mass LWFW and an appropriate clutch and pressure plate. Check out ECS Tuning or give Mike Hood a call at Ringer Racing. I got my clutch/flywheel kit from him a few years ago. Great price and Mike has been a B5 enthusiast since the turn of the century.
As for a replacement, that will depend on your car and what you plan on doing with it and/or to it after the clutch job. For light driving on a 100% stock car I would go with a stockish clutch and pressure plate and re-use the stock flywheel. If the flywheel has a lot of hot spots on it you may be able to get it resurfaced, but I elected to go with a single mass flywheel instead. A new dual mass flywheel for your car is like $800. For higher HP applications you'll want a single mass LWFW and an appropriate clutch and pressure plate. Check out ECS Tuning or give Mike Hood a call at Ringer Racing. I got my clutch/flywheel kit from him a few years ago. Great price and Mike has been a B5 enthusiast since the turn of the century.
What the difference in Stages? (besides price)
Audi B5 A4 Quattro 1.8T Drivetrain Clutch - RA4S1-STEEL - RA4 Conversion Clutch Kit - Stage 1 - ES#5485 (?)
The "stage" thing is just a way to group the parts based on how much HP/TQ your car makes. If the car is stock or mostly stock, stage 1 will be fine. If you plan on doing any power mods in the future or your car is already modified, go with stage 2/3/4 as appropriate. Keep in mind you always want to over-estimate the TQ figures when picking a clutch. The one you linked in your post above is very popular and has proven to be reliable.
Tough one then. I have never actually taken out a transmission. Everytime I do something like clutch work, I remove the engine. From what I have heard, it sucks to take out the transmission.
Yea i was thinking about just removing the engine. Thanks! Ill keep posted and post pictures as i go. This will be a weekend slowly job as i work week days and weekend. so very little time to mess around with it.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
ivanruiz817
B6 Models
5
Sep 16, 2011 02:38 AM
loves4
S Car Model Line
2
Feb 12, 2008 08:45 AM
Matt_Iliketurbopull
Audi A4
13
May 1, 2007 05:28 PM
Matt_Iliketurbopull
General Tech
2
Apr 28, 2007 03:06 PM



