How does a clutch work and why do we need it to change gears smoothly?

671 views

How does a clutch work and why do we need it to change gears smoothly?

In: Engineering

4 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

The problem is a combustion engine can’t start turning from stop – that’s why it needs a starter motor… but we need to be able to connect it to the wheels of a car that is stopped without grinding the metal of the gears together and allowing us to do so gradually for that acceleration. If the weight of the car were introduced to the engine instantly it would just force the engine to slow down so much it would stop – this is stalling the engine.

So how do we get the car moving when what we have is an engine that can’t be stopped? Gears alone can’t solve that specific problem.

The answer is to introduce another part – the clutch. It tolerates slipping – it can move at a different speed from the engine and partially transfer the power. So we can use the clutch to introduce engine power gradually while allowing the engine to spin faster than the gears during that starting-from-a-stop phase.

The clutch is a big round disc with material on it like what your brakes are made of. It connects to the transmission/gearbox facing the engine with that brakepad material facing the engine. The engine has a big round disc of its own facing the clutch which is what the engine is turning, and the clutch is push into this engine disc by a strong spring-like mechanism. Like brakes they lock up when the pressure is at maximum and they’re as good as bolted together most of the time, spinning together. However the clutch pedal, when pressed, pulls the clutch disc away from the engine. The pressure on the clutch pedal is that spring. As you release the clutch pedal the clutch disc is pressed back into the engine. When the clutch is partially down there’s partial pressure onto the engine, like when you’re applying the brakes gently to stop – rubbing together causing a force to be applied.

To prevent grinding gears when moving the gear lever around, press the clutch pedal all the way down so the clutch disc is fully separated from the engine. Now with minimal weight on the gears you can move between them without issue. Release the clutch slowly so the friction between the clutch and engine will make the engine slow down a little bit – add gas here to help compensate – and the gears will start slowly turning, hence turning the wheels.

Now… in theory you don’t need to press the clutch pedal to change gears while moving. If the engine speed is exactly correct for the current car speed, then the gear lever will go into gear without fuss even if you don’t touch the clutch pedal. In practice there is very little room for error here and a mistake will cause metal to grind. Disconnect the engine from the gearbox while changing gears to make the procedure safe, and then reconnect the engine and gears with the clutch. Let it take the speed difference – that’s what it’s designed to do. Seriously, never do this.

You are viewing 1 out of 4 answers, click here to view all answers.