Originally posted by LJ851
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Need the help of R3V - Amputee Driving a Clutch
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Even if you had the clutch at your hand you'd still have to drive with your right leg correct? Or would you just use you left foot to operate the standard pedal setup?
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So, you say you have very little control or mobility with your prosthetic on your right leg, and you think you're going to somehow reverse engineer a crossed up clutch/throttle linkage on this car?
How exactly do you plan on finding and modulating the friction point on a car without the basic feeling in the foot?
You really sound like you're trying to reinvent the wheel here. Why not get a lower prosthetic with a little more mobility in the ankle, and just use that to drive the throttle pedal like normal? Let your left foot work the clutch and possibly brake.
Or, find a nice 2500 dollar E36 with an M50 and an automatic. Voila.
-CharlieSwing wild, brake later, don't apologize.'89 324d, '76 02, '98 318ti, '03 Z4, '07 MCS, '07 F800s - Bonafide BMW elitist prick.FYYFF
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Originally posted by HarryPotter View PostEven if you had the clutch at your hand you'd still have to drive with your right leg correct? Or would you just use you left foot to operate the standard pedal setup?
Originally posted by Charlie View PostSo, you say you have very little control or mobility with your prosthetic on your right leg, and you think you're going to somehow reverse engineer a crossed up clutch/throttle linkage on this car?
How exactly do you plan on finding and modulating the friction point on a car without the basic feeling in the foot?
You really sound like you're trying to reinvent the wheel here. Why not get a lower prosthetic with a little more mobility in the ankle, and just use that to drive the throttle pedal like normal? Let your left foot work the clutch and possibly brake.
Or, find a nice 2500 dollar E36 with an M50 and an automatic. Voila.
-Charlie
Think about it. How much feel do you REALLY need to do the clutch. If you have a clutchstop, and I will, than whats the big deal? I can feel the vibrations through that foot believe it or not.
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When you step on the clutch pedal it moves a piston in the clutch M/C. The fluid under the piston moves down the clutch line as you push the pedal down and hits the back of the slave cyl piston and pushes the slave cyl piston thus pushing the throwout arm and disengaging the clutch. On to the leverage ratio. If you put a bigger piston in the master cyl, the pedal will be harder to push but you wont have to push it as far to disengage the clutch. If you put a smaller piston in the M/C , the pedal will be easier to push but you will have to push it farther to disengage the clutch. Make sense? The opposite is true of the slave cyl.
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I like the hand-operated clutch idea. Seems like if you got the leverage right (and you would likely need a long shift lever to mount a clutch lever, kinda like a ratchet shifter) it shouldn't be too bad. Otherwise, I think that switching the pedal arrangement is iffy, as I'm sure there will be other cars in the future, and sometimes its really nice for others to be able to drive your car. Velcro would work, although I don't know if it would be strong enough.
EDIT: as far as feeling the clutch goes, you should be fine with that as you will probably be able to feel the pedal pressure, just with a different part of your body.
Either way, props to you, and go prove your parents wrong!
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I see what you are saying. So volume is what counts in the cyloinder, just like an engine. You can have the stock 19mm bore by (guess here) 50mm stroke MC or get same thing out of a 22mm bore and 20mmish stroke
So Mechanical energy to hydraulic pressure in MC.
Then hydraulic pressure operates SC to move clutch.
So I would keep the stock SC
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Originally posted by gearheadE30 View PostI like the hand-operated clutch idea. Seems like if you got the leverage right (and you would likely need a long shift lever to mount a clutch lever, kinda like a ratchet shifter) it shouldn't be too bad. Otherwise, I think that switching the pedal arrangement is iffy, as I'm sure there will be other cars in the future, and sometimes its really nice for others to be able to drive your car. Velcro would work, although I don't know if it would be strong enough.
Either way, props to you, and go prove your parents wrong!
Yeah but I can always saw a bit off of the handle/lever.
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