Godfrey DiGiorgi wrote:

> The engine and transmission of all the FWD cars I've worked on was  
> most easily removed by pulling them up out of the engine compartment.  
> Some come out most easily as a unit. Others require they be separated  
> in the car. It's been relatively straightforward to do. I have also  
> changed the clutch on a few of them without removing them from the  
> car. It was easy on the SAAB 99 and Austin Mini, a bit of a pain on  
> the FIAT 128, and you have to remove the engine to get to it on the  
> SAAB 96.
> 
> I think you're making a much bigger deal out of the job through  
> unfamiliarity than it actually is. Disconnection from the front  
> wheels has generally been quite easy. You don't have to take the  
> suspension completely apart except in the rare instances of an  
> atrocious design. It's often a matter of unbolting a suspension  
> upright to allow some movement, slide the half-shafts off the  
> transmission unit, and you're done.
> 
> I haven't done much work on anything newer than 1980 because *all*  
> cars got to be too much of a pain to work on to be worth my time, and  
> because I stopped doing auto/motorcycle mechanics for a living in  
> 1980 when I moved to California.

Many (most?) modern FWD cars require a hoist and an engine jack.  The 
whole car is lifted, the jack placed under the engine and, after the 
usual disconnections, the whole power unit is dropped, in its subframe 
assembly, to be worked on.  Very quick and efficient _if_ you have the 
hoist and engine jack.  About £120,000 worth of kit here.

> 
> That said, I've had the clutch replaced on both my Alfa Romeo Spider  
> (front engine, rear drive) and Toyota MR2 (midengine drive unit  
> lifted from a Corolla FWD car) within the past eight years.  
> Discounting cost of parts (the Alfa was cheaper), the labor charged  
> to do the jobs was identical. No other car I've owned since 1980  
> (about seven different ones) has ever required any service to the  
> transmission or driveline components, and they've all cost roughly  
> the same thing to service      otherwise.
> 
> G
> 
> On Jul 25, 2006, at 8:38 AM, Gonz wrote:
> 
> 
>>Sure, but on FWD, you still cant do that easily, it has to come out  
>>the
>>bottom, and on most of the ones I've seen, you have to still remove  
>>alot
>>of stuff before you can do that.  Again, its because the two half  
>>shafts
>>are connected to the transaxle and the front wheels, which in turn is
>>connected to a bunch of suspension stuff.  And the ones I've seen also
>>cant go down without taking some frame members off because the  
>>transaxle
>>sticks out the side too much.  I dont claim to have seen them all, and
>>as Godfrey points out, there are exceptions to both sides, but  
>>generally
>>speaking most of the FWD drive trains have the same rough removal  
>>procedure.
> 
> 
> 


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