I'd be interested if anyone has a compelling reason why this is poor solution...!
To get the run of the clutch cable I want (avoiding where one of the brake lines will go into the master cylinder) - and to get tension on the cable
i've swapped the short 'angled' tube on the back of the 'Book' Haynes Roadster pedal box for a longer tube that exits
squarely at 90 degrees.
The extra length and loss of the angle introduces the problem that the clutch inner cable chafes on the pedal box as it exits the tube to come down to
the bottom of the pedal. So I've fitted a length of garden hosepipe 'inside' the footwell to act as an addtional length of outer cable
running almost all the way up to the end of the pedal.
Pedal movement seems fine - and as the clutch inner cable is itself plastic lined - I can't see there will be rapid wear between the inner and
the hosepipe outer.
There's a photo here (sorry about the size!) - the hosepipe goes the full length of the horizontal tube, so won't work loose.
Looking at the angle the cable goes through before going through the bulkhead I suspect it will fracture. The pedal pivot point is too low
quote:
Originally posted by rusty nuts
Looking at the angle the cable goes through before going through the bulkhead I suspect it will fracture. The pedal pivot point is too low
I'd shift the pivot, reckon it will chop through the hose pipe in no time.
quote:
Originally posted by AdamR20
I'd shift the pivot, reckon it will chop through the hose pipe in no time.