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Posted

There are a couple of places that do that kind of work that have been mentioned by members on the forum. Fort Wayne Clutch was one of them I believe. Hopefully other members will chime in with their favourites as well. You could also use the Search function and I am sure you would come up with the names. Good luck with the project.

Posted

We have a small clutch shop here, a one man operation, and he did a

good job for fairly reasonable price. Just need to check around in

your area.

Posted

It sounds like you want to buy a disk and resurface the clutch or flywheel your self, DON'T do it. You will never get a flat sureface, take it to a machinne shop that has the right equipment. I just had it done on my 57 chev for 35 bucks.

Posted

Knoxville Clutch and Brake did mine, but I'm sure you can find someone closer to you.

Posted

Your question is somewhat un clear. Are you are wanting to re-surface your pressure plate and flywheel? Or find a new clutch disc, or all the above?

If you want to re-surface your flywheel find a machine shop that can use a grinding wheel to do so. Re-surfacing with a lathe tool will not work. An aged flywheel has developed hot spots that are hardened and a lathe tool will chatter not giving a true cut. The surface must be ground while rotating in a true circle to grind away the hard spots.

I suggest you send your pressure plate to a speciality company who rebuilds them installing new springs and making proper adjustments. Pasted below is contact information for one company who does this work.

A replacement disc can be purchased at many locations (including the one listed below) or can be re-lined also at many locations.

9-8-0421.jpg

clutch2.jpg

Posted

Don, does it have to be rotated as it's ground? The reason I ask is where I work I've seen several guys bring flywheels in to be ground on our surface grinders. They grind in a linear motion, would this not be sufficent?

Posted
Don, does it have to be rotated as it's ground? The reason I ask is where I work I've seen several guys bring flywheels in to be ground on our surface grinders. They grind in a linear motion, would this not be sufficent?

In my opinion I dont think a surface grinder would do well in this application. But this is just my humble opinion. If the flywheel is chucked up in a lathe and spinning true as the grinding wheel is doing it's job then the surface will be true. If the flywheel is secured to a non rotating table as the grinder makes passes the likely hood of a less than true (spinning surface) seems logical. On a non rotating surface such as an engine head or engine manifold, a surface grinde should work well. But this is once again just my opinion and open for debate.

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