That sounds really familiar. I just ordered some seals. Now time for the teardown againInput shaft seal leak will tend to drip fluid when parked, as the bellhousing collects fluid which later runs down. It also pools while driving, and when making a left turn, flows out and creates a smoke show when it hits the exhaust. Ask me how I know![]()
Yeah I recently changed the slave cylinder but didn’t change the input seal. It could’ve got metal shavings in it or be old. It’s got 130k miles so I’ll see later when I pull it outThis was after my F23 swap. As far as I could tell, the input shaft seal was integral to the slave cylinder, so I had to buy a new one. Did you manage to find just the input shaft seal? I don't think the F35 slave cylinder was that different to the F23.
Oh I see. I wasn’t sure if I could just take it back off and replace one. That’s even if it’s leaking from there. I’m gonna take it apart tomorrow afternoon and follow up with what I find.Sorry if this wasn't clear- the input shaft seal is part of the slave cylinder, so as far as I could tell, you can't replace just the input shaft seal. If you replaced the slave cylinder, it should be a new input shaft seal.
I started with a brand new OEM slave cylinder, cleaned and lubed the input shaft sealing surface, slid it into position carefully, did everything right (I think) and still ended up with a torn input shaft seal. I never did figure out if it was always torn or if it was just a fluke, but once I put a second brand new OEM slave cylinder on, my leak went away. However, given that you have to slide the slave cylinder over the input shaft, it's definitely feasible that you could have torn the seal over the splines on the input shaft.
I thought I saw somewhere on a cobalt forum where they grease the splines to make it easier to put back in. I might try that as well.You might want to wrap some tape around the shaft when sliding the seal into place. I vaguely remember maybe doing this on mine.
I added blue Loctite, then Teflon tape, then Loctite again lol. I’m praying this is the last time I have to take this transmission out for the meantime.Do the bolts go all the way through? If so, I’d add some thread sealer
My I can see the gears through mine but I think you’re right with the seal on the back. I have it but it still seems to leak a little bit. It’s not slinging it from the flywheel now, but it might not be pooled up yet because a lot of oil feel out when I split the housing from the block. This Throwout bearing is a week old at this point and leaked from the start so I don’t know if I got a bad one or if it’s coming from somewhere else.I have an F35 laying on the ground in my garage so I can check tonight, but I don't think those bolt have fluid behind them. The back of the slave cylinder, though, does have a gasket on it that seals transmission fluid. I would imagine a leak there would be very similar to an input shaft seal leak, although maybe slightly less likely to leak trans fluid onto the clutch disc as I experienced.
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