EDIT NEW INFORMATION: After some extra time testing to reproduce the issue, I've seemingly been able to determine that there's definitely an issue with the clutch or some part in the bellhousing that may be independent of the rev up behaviour
I've been able to reproduce it on shorter drives, not completely reliably, but I can often get it to happen when I'm shifting from in higher RPMS (~4.5k+).
-Sometimes when I shift in these conditions, when the clutch pedal gets to the bottom of its travel I will feel some mechanical rumbling/feedback through the clutch pedal and hear a loud and RPM dependent whine as the revs change. It sounds and feels bad. Based on the feeling in the clutch pedal and the noise, it would seem that there's absolutely something weird/bad happening in the bellhousing.
-When the above happens, sometimes but not all the time, revs will go *up* instead of down when the clutch is fully disengaged (foot at bottom of clutch pedal travel). Since it doesn't always happen, I'll assume at this point that this is a separate issue from the above that just happens to coincide with it sometimes.
I'd first like to focus on the problem in the bellhousing. I realize that if there's something wrong in there (bad throwout bearing, pressure plate, etc) it doesn't really matter what it is the treatment is likely the same -- I'm probably dropping the transmission and doing a full clutch job and refresh in there. That said, I would really like to figure out what exactly went wrong here or if I made some error on install last time I was in there. The clutch, throwout bearing, slave cyl, really every part inside the bellhousing aside from flywheel, was refreshed with my 6MT swap and has 50k miles on them, so whatever this failure is it seems premature. I did the work myself.
Any thoughts ideas?
Original Post below:
I've done a few long (5-10 hour) drives/roadtrips in the last couple weeks and have come across a very strange intermittent issue: sometimes, after I've been driving for a while, when I push the clutch pedal all the way down, revs will go UP until I let the clutch pedal back out. Yes, my other foot is completely off of the throttle when this occurs. It doesn't happen when the car is cold, or on short trips. Only after I've been driving the car for an hour or two, and/or I've been doing some higher RPM runs. When my car gets into this "operating condition", it will happen reliably when I push the clutch pedal down low enough, but I can avoid it if I don't push the pedal all the way down to the clutch stop.
Anyone ever experience something like this?
The only possible thing that makes sense to me is that there is somehow something wrong with the throttle/fuel system, as I can't imagine how any sort of failure in the clutch system could cause revs to go up when the clutch is disengaged and I'm off throttle. Am I wrong? But the car drives completely normally otherwise, and I would think if the throttle was getting stuck open or something, that would be pretty noticeable in normal driving, no?
No error/fault codes.
Really scratching my head here. Clutch has 50k miles on it. Fuel system (including injectors and pump) less than 3 years and 30k miles old. Last time I had the airbox off the ITBs looked fine. Any ideas?
I've been able to reproduce it on shorter drives, not completely reliably, but I can often get it to happen when I'm shifting from in higher RPMS (~4.5k+).
-Sometimes when I shift in these conditions, when the clutch pedal gets to the bottom of its travel I will feel some mechanical rumbling/feedback through the clutch pedal and hear a loud and RPM dependent whine as the revs change. It sounds and feels bad. Based on the feeling in the clutch pedal and the noise, it would seem that there's absolutely something weird/bad happening in the bellhousing.
-When the above happens, sometimes but not all the time, revs will go *up* instead of down when the clutch is fully disengaged (foot at bottom of clutch pedal travel). Since it doesn't always happen, I'll assume at this point that this is a separate issue from the above that just happens to coincide with it sometimes.
I'd first like to focus on the problem in the bellhousing. I realize that if there's something wrong in there (bad throwout bearing, pressure plate, etc) it doesn't really matter what it is the treatment is likely the same -- I'm probably dropping the transmission and doing a full clutch job and refresh in there. That said, I would really like to figure out what exactly went wrong here or if I made some error on install last time I was in there. The clutch, throwout bearing, slave cyl, really every part inside the bellhousing aside from flywheel, was refreshed with my 6MT swap and has 50k miles on them, so whatever this failure is it seems premature. I did the work myself.
Any thoughts ideas?
Original Post below:
I've done a few long (5-10 hour) drives/roadtrips in the last couple weeks and have come across a very strange intermittent issue: sometimes, after I've been driving for a while, when I push the clutch pedal all the way down, revs will go UP until I let the clutch pedal back out. Yes, my other foot is completely off of the throttle when this occurs. It doesn't happen when the car is cold, or on short trips. Only after I've been driving the car for an hour or two, and/or I've been doing some higher RPM runs. When my car gets into this "operating condition", it will happen reliably when I push the clutch pedal down low enough, but I can avoid it if I don't push the pedal all the way down to the clutch stop.
Anyone ever experience something like this?
The only possible thing that makes sense to me is that there is somehow something wrong with the throttle/fuel system, as I can't imagine how any sort of failure in the clutch system could cause revs to go up when the clutch is disengaged and I'm off throttle. Am I wrong? But the car drives completely normally otherwise, and I would think if the throttle was getting stuck open or something, that would be pretty noticeable in normal driving, no?
No error/fault codes.
Really scratching my head here. Clutch has 50k miles on it. Fuel system (including injectors and pump) less than 3 years and 30k miles old. Last time I had the airbox off the ITBs looked fine. Any ideas?
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