When I step on gas pedal, the engine revs up but there is no acceleration











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10
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When I step on gas pedal, the engine revs up but there is no acceleration. When step off gas a bit it car starts to accelerate again. It's a manual transmission. 2005 Toyota Corolla. This is happening more and more frequently.



Is this a problem with the transmission, clutch or something else altogether? And wondering if it's going to cost a lot to fix.










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New contributor




josi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • How long have you owned it? How many miles are on it? How many miles did the term of your ownership put on it?
    – MonkeyZeus
    Nov 15 at 19:36










  • I'm the original owner so 13 years with approx 275000km
    – josi
    Nov 15 at 20:22










  • Wow, very nice. Definitely sounds like a clutch problem so if you get it repaired then enjoy your car for the next 275000km!
    – MonkeyZeus
    Nov 15 at 20:34










  • Yes! If it wasn't for the rust I think it would be best to fix but these canadian winters are not so kind...i'm not sure I'd get another 275000km :)
    – josi
    Nov 15 at 21:28










  • I personally wouldn't agree that you should go for a factory dual mass unit if/when you replace the flywheel, my suggestion is to get a 'stock pressure' organic aftermarket clutch kit from someone like ACT or Exceddy, with a single mass flywheel. MUCH cheaper option than an OEM replacement, and honestly it's just NVH (noise/vibration/harshness) that a dual mass flywheel helps with in a car like yours.
    – Aaron Lavers
    Nov 16 at 6:53















up vote
10
down vote

favorite












When I step on gas pedal, the engine revs up but there is no acceleration. When step off gas a bit it car starts to accelerate again. It's a manual transmission. 2005 Toyota Corolla. This is happening more and more frequently.



Is this a problem with the transmission, clutch or something else altogether? And wondering if it's going to cost a lot to fix.










share|improve this question







New contributor




josi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • How long have you owned it? How many miles are on it? How many miles did the term of your ownership put on it?
    – MonkeyZeus
    Nov 15 at 19:36










  • I'm the original owner so 13 years with approx 275000km
    – josi
    Nov 15 at 20:22










  • Wow, very nice. Definitely sounds like a clutch problem so if you get it repaired then enjoy your car for the next 275000km!
    – MonkeyZeus
    Nov 15 at 20:34










  • Yes! If it wasn't for the rust I think it would be best to fix but these canadian winters are not so kind...i'm not sure I'd get another 275000km :)
    – josi
    Nov 15 at 21:28










  • I personally wouldn't agree that you should go for a factory dual mass unit if/when you replace the flywheel, my suggestion is to get a 'stock pressure' organic aftermarket clutch kit from someone like ACT or Exceddy, with a single mass flywheel. MUCH cheaper option than an OEM replacement, and honestly it's just NVH (noise/vibration/harshness) that a dual mass flywheel helps with in a car like yours.
    – Aaron Lavers
    Nov 16 at 6:53













up vote
10
down vote

favorite









up vote
10
down vote

favorite











When I step on gas pedal, the engine revs up but there is no acceleration. When step off gas a bit it car starts to accelerate again. It's a manual transmission. 2005 Toyota Corolla. This is happening more and more frequently.



Is this a problem with the transmission, clutch or something else altogether? And wondering if it's going to cost a lot to fix.










share|improve this question







New contributor




josi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











When I step on gas pedal, the engine revs up but there is no acceleration. When step off gas a bit it car starts to accelerate again. It's a manual transmission. 2005 Toyota Corolla. This is happening more and more frequently.



Is this a problem with the transmission, clutch or something else altogether? And wondering if it's going to cost a lot to fix.







acceleration






share|improve this question







New contributor




josi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




josi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






New contributor




josi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked Nov 15 at 15:39









josi

5113




5113




New contributor




josi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





josi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






josi is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • How long have you owned it? How many miles are on it? How many miles did the term of your ownership put on it?
    – MonkeyZeus
    Nov 15 at 19:36










  • I'm the original owner so 13 years with approx 275000km
    – josi
    Nov 15 at 20:22










  • Wow, very nice. Definitely sounds like a clutch problem so if you get it repaired then enjoy your car for the next 275000km!
    – MonkeyZeus
    Nov 15 at 20:34










  • Yes! If it wasn't for the rust I think it would be best to fix but these canadian winters are not so kind...i'm not sure I'd get another 275000km :)
    – josi
    Nov 15 at 21:28










  • I personally wouldn't agree that you should go for a factory dual mass unit if/when you replace the flywheel, my suggestion is to get a 'stock pressure' organic aftermarket clutch kit from someone like ACT or Exceddy, with a single mass flywheel. MUCH cheaper option than an OEM replacement, and honestly it's just NVH (noise/vibration/harshness) that a dual mass flywheel helps with in a car like yours.
    – Aaron Lavers
    Nov 16 at 6:53


















  • How long have you owned it? How many miles are on it? How many miles did the term of your ownership put on it?
    – MonkeyZeus
    Nov 15 at 19:36










  • I'm the original owner so 13 years with approx 275000km
    – josi
    Nov 15 at 20:22










  • Wow, very nice. Definitely sounds like a clutch problem so if you get it repaired then enjoy your car for the next 275000km!
    – MonkeyZeus
    Nov 15 at 20:34










  • Yes! If it wasn't for the rust I think it would be best to fix but these canadian winters are not so kind...i'm not sure I'd get another 275000km :)
    – josi
    Nov 15 at 21:28










  • I personally wouldn't agree that you should go for a factory dual mass unit if/when you replace the flywheel, my suggestion is to get a 'stock pressure' organic aftermarket clutch kit from someone like ACT or Exceddy, with a single mass flywheel. MUCH cheaper option than an OEM replacement, and honestly it's just NVH (noise/vibration/harshness) that a dual mass flywheel helps with in a car like yours.
    – Aaron Lavers
    Nov 16 at 6:53
















How long have you owned it? How many miles are on it? How many miles did the term of your ownership put on it?
– MonkeyZeus
Nov 15 at 19:36




How long have you owned it? How many miles are on it? How many miles did the term of your ownership put on it?
– MonkeyZeus
Nov 15 at 19:36












I'm the original owner so 13 years with approx 275000km
– josi
Nov 15 at 20:22




I'm the original owner so 13 years with approx 275000km
– josi
Nov 15 at 20:22












Wow, very nice. Definitely sounds like a clutch problem so if you get it repaired then enjoy your car for the next 275000km!
– MonkeyZeus
Nov 15 at 20:34




Wow, very nice. Definitely sounds like a clutch problem so if you get it repaired then enjoy your car for the next 275000km!
– MonkeyZeus
Nov 15 at 20:34












Yes! If it wasn't for the rust I think it would be best to fix but these canadian winters are not so kind...i'm not sure I'd get another 275000km :)
– josi
Nov 15 at 21:28




Yes! If it wasn't for the rust I think it would be best to fix but these canadian winters are not so kind...i'm not sure I'd get another 275000km :)
– josi
Nov 15 at 21:28












I personally wouldn't agree that you should go for a factory dual mass unit if/when you replace the flywheel, my suggestion is to get a 'stock pressure' organic aftermarket clutch kit from someone like ACT or Exceddy, with a single mass flywheel. MUCH cheaper option than an OEM replacement, and honestly it's just NVH (noise/vibration/harshness) that a dual mass flywheel helps with in a car like yours.
– Aaron Lavers
Nov 16 at 6:53




I personally wouldn't agree that you should go for a factory dual mass unit if/when you replace the flywheel, my suggestion is to get a 'stock pressure' organic aftermarket clutch kit from someone like ACT or Exceddy, with a single mass flywheel. MUCH cheaper option than an OEM replacement, and honestly it's just NVH (noise/vibration/harshness) that a dual mass flywheel helps with in a car like yours.
– Aaron Lavers
Nov 16 at 6:53










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
20
down vote













This sounds like the classic symptoms of a slipping clutch.



The solution is to replace it or have it replaced. If it is a DMF (Dual Mass Flywheel - fitted to reduce vibration) type then it is usually a good idea to replace that as well at the same time.



The minimum will be a centre or friction plate, but personally I will always fit a new pressure plate at the same time. If the flywheel surface shows serious signs of wear then that may need skimming or replacing.



As for prices, they vary between countries, and within countries even, for the cost of labor, parts also vary in price, so you have to find out for your area.






share|improve this answer























  • Totalling correct answer. Always change DMF together with the clutch.
    – AsenM
    Nov 15 at 17:04










  • @AsenM well, I know people who are selling who do the minimum... but others who are keeping do do the dmf at the same time...
    – Solar Mike
    Nov 15 at 17:32










  • Alright, I guess I'll have to get an estimate on the repair...figure out if it's worth the repair cost. It's getting up there in age :) Thank you!
    – josi
    Nov 15 at 20:25


















up vote
6
down vote













While I agree it is probably a slipping clutch, before I had the cluth and pressure plate replaced I think you would want to have the clutch pedal cable checked to see if it is mis-adjusted. In some cases the pedal play may be causing the clutch to be slightly engaged even when your foot is off the pedal. This adjustment should be very inexpensive if you haven't already polished (hence damaged) the friction plate.
The sooner the better to avoid further damage.






share|improve this answer





















  • While modern cars can have their clutch engagement point adjusted, it should be noted that an '05 Corolla uses a hydraulic clutch system and not a cable system. Of course, Rob's not wrong here - a misadjusted clutch (or even one that needs new fluid or a good bleed) can cause this symptom.
    – Aaron Lavers
    Nov 16 at 6:46






  • 1




    On a car with 275,000km on the original clutch... I mean, odds are
    – J...
    Nov 16 at 13:34










  • Sure, but $50 to have a mechanic check the cable before you spend 10x+ on parts and labor for a clutch isn't absurd.
    – Adonalsium
    Nov 16 at 13:53










  • @Adonalsium it is difficult to check a clutch cable for correct functioning on a car with a hydraulic clutch - asking a mechanic to do that will confirm his opinion of some customers...
    – Solar Mike
    Nov 18 at 6:12











Your Answer








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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
20
down vote













This sounds like the classic symptoms of a slipping clutch.



The solution is to replace it or have it replaced. If it is a DMF (Dual Mass Flywheel - fitted to reduce vibration) type then it is usually a good idea to replace that as well at the same time.



The minimum will be a centre or friction plate, but personally I will always fit a new pressure plate at the same time. If the flywheel surface shows serious signs of wear then that may need skimming or replacing.



As for prices, they vary between countries, and within countries even, for the cost of labor, parts also vary in price, so you have to find out for your area.






share|improve this answer























  • Totalling correct answer. Always change DMF together with the clutch.
    – AsenM
    Nov 15 at 17:04










  • @AsenM well, I know people who are selling who do the minimum... but others who are keeping do do the dmf at the same time...
    – Solar Mike
    Nov 15 at 17:32










  • Alright, I guess I'll have to get an estimate on the repair...figure out if it's worth the repair cost. It's getting up there in age :) Thank you!
    – josi
    Nov 15 at 20:25















up vote
20
down vote













This sounds like the classic symptoms of a slipping clutch.



The solution is to replace it or have it replaced. If it is a DMF (Dual Mass Flywheel - fitted to reduce vibration) type then it is usually a good idea to replace that as well at the same time.



The minimum will be a centre or friction plate, but personally I will always fit a new pressure plate at the same time. If the flywheel surface shows serious signs of wear then that may need skimming or replacing.



As for prices, they vary between countries, and within countries even, for the cost of labor, parts also vary in price, so you have to find out for your area.






share|improve this answer























  • Totalling correct answer. Always change DMF together with the clutch.
    – AsenM
    Nov 15 at 17:04










  • @AsenM well, I know people who are selling who do the minimum... but others who are keeping do do the dmf at the same time...
    – Solar Mike
    Nov 15 at 17:32










  • Alright, I guess I'll have to get an estimate on the repair...figure out if it's worth the repair cost. It's getting up there in age :) Thank you!
    – josi
    Nov 15 at 20:25













up vote
20
down vote










up vote
20
down vote









This sounds like the classic symptoms of a slipping clutch.



The solution is to replace it or have it replaced. If it is a DMF (Dual Mass Flywheel - fitted to reduce vibration) type then it is usually a good idea to replace that as well at the same time.



The minimum will be a centre or friction plate, but personally I will always fit a new pressure plate at the same time. If the flywheel surface shows serious signs of wear then that may need skimming or replacing.



As for prices, they vary between countries, and within countries even, for the cost of labor, parts also vary in price, so you have to find out for your area.






share|improve this answer














This sounds like the classic symptoms of a slipping clutch.



The solution is to replace it or have it replaced. If it is a DMF (Dual Mass Flywheel - fitted to reduce vibration) type then it is usually a good idea to replace that as well at the same time.



The minimum will be a centre or friction plate, but personally I will always fit a new pressure plate at the same time. If the flywheel surface shows serious signs of wear then that may need skimming or replacing.



As for prices, they vary between countries, and within countries even, for the cost of labor, parts also vary in price, so you have to find out for your area.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 15 at 16:03

























answered Nov 15 at 15:47









Solar Mike

16.8k21030




16.8k21030












  • Totalling correct answer. Always change DMF together with the clutch.
    – AsenM
    Nov 15 at 17:04










  • @AsenM well, I know people who are selling who do the minimum... but others who are keeping do do the dmf at the same time...
    – Solar Mike
    Nov 15 at 17:32










  • Alright, I guess I'll have to get an estimate on the repair...figure out if it's worth the repair cost. It's getting up there in age :) Thank you!
    – josi
    Nov 15 at 20:25


















  • Totalling correct answer. Always change DMF together with the clutch.
    – AsenM
    Nov 15 at 17:04










  • @AsenM well, I know people who are selling who do the minimum... but others who are keeping do do the dmf at the same time...
    – Solar Mike
    Nov 15 at 17:32










  • Alright, I guess I'll have to get an estimate on the repair...figure out if it's worth the repair cost. It's getting up there in age :) Thank you!
    – josi
    Nov 15 at 20:25
















Totalling correct answer. Always change DMF together with the clutch.
– AsenM
Nov 15 at 17:04




Totalling correct answer. Always change DMF together with the clutch.
– AsenM
Nov 15 at 17:04












@AsenM well, I know people who are selling who do the minimum... but others who are keeping do do the dmf at the same time...
– Solar Mike
Nov 15 at 17:32




@AsenM well, I know people who are selling who do the minimum... but others who are keeping do do the dmf at the same time...
– Solar Mike
Nov 15 at 17:32












Alright, I guess I'll have to get an estimate on the repair...figure out if it's worth the repair cost. It's getting up there in age :) Thank you!
– josi
Nov 15 at 20:25




Alright, I guess I'll have to get an estimate on the repair...figure out if it's worth the repair cost. It's getting up there in age :) Thank you!
– josi
Nov 15 at 20:25










up vote
6
down vote













While I agree it is probably a slipping clutch, before I had the cluth and pressure plate replaced I think you would want to have the clutch pedal cable checked to see if it is mis-adjusted. In some cases the pedal play may be causing the clutch to be slightly engaged even when your foot is off the pedal. This adjustment should be very inexpensive if you haven't already polished (hence damaged) the friction plate.
The sooner the better to avoid further damage.






share|improve this answer





















  • While modern cars can have their clutch engagement point adjusted, it should be noted that an '05 Corolla uses a hydraulic clutch system and not a cable system. Of course, Rob's not wrong here - a misadjusted clutch (or even one that needs new fluid or a good bleed) can cause this symptom.
    – Aaron Lavers
    Nov 16 at 6:46






  • 1




    On a car with 275,000km on the original clutch... I mean, odds are
    – J...
    Nov 16 at 13:34










  • Sure, but $50 to have a mechanic check the cable before you spend 10x+ on parts and labor for a clutch isn't absurd.
    – Adonalsium
    Nov 16 at 13:53










  • @Adonalsium it is difficult to check a clutch cable for correct functioning on a car with a hydraulic clutch - asking a mechanic to do that will confirm his opinion of some customers...
    – Solar Mike
    Nov 18 at 6:12















up vote
6
down vote













While I agree it is probably a slipping clutch, before I had the cluth and pressure plate replaced I think you would want to have the clutch pedal cable checked to see if it is mis-adjusted. In some cases the pedal play may be causing the clutch to be slightly engaged even when your foot is off the pedal. This adjustment should be very inexpensive if you haven't already polished (hence damaged) the friction plate.
The sooner the better to avoid further damage.






share|improve this answer





















  • While modern cars can have their clutch engagement point adjusted, it should be noted that an '05 Corolla uses a hydraulic clutch system and not a cable system. Of course, Rob's not wrong here - a misadjusted clutch (or even one that needs new fluid or a good bleed) can cause this symptom.
    – Aaron Lavers
    Nov 16 at 6:46






  • 1




    On a car with 275,000km on the original clutch... I mean, odds are
    – J...
    Nov 16 at 13:34










  • Sure, but $50 to have a mechanic check the cable before you spend 10x+ on parts and labor for a clutch isn't absurd.
    – Adonalsium
    Nov 16 at 13:53










  • @Adonalsium it is difficult to check a clutch cable for correct functioning on a car with a hydraulic clutch - asking a mechanic to do that will confirm his opinion of some customers...
    – Solar Mike
    Nov 18 at 6:12













up vote
6
down vote










up vote
6
down vote









While I agree it is probably a slipping clutch, before I had the cluth and pressure plate replaced I think you would want to have the clutch pedal cable checked to see if it is mis-adjusted. In some cases the pedal play may be causing the clutch to be slightly engaged even when your foot is off the pedal. This adjustment should be very inexpensive if you haven't already polished (hence damaged) the friction plate.
The sooner the better to avoid further damage.






share|improve this answer












While I agree it is probably a slipping clutch, before I had the cluth and pressure plate replaced I think you would want to have the clutch pedal cable checked to see if it is mis-adjusted. In some cases the pedal play may be causing the clutch to be slightly engaged even when your foot is off the pedal. This adjustment should be very inexpensive if you haven't already polished (hence damaged) the friction plate.
The sooner the better to avoid further damage.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Nov 15 at 18:30









Robert Cline

1011




1011












  • While modern cars can have their clutch engagement point adjusted, it should be noted that an '05 Corolla uses a hydraulic clutch system and not a cable system. Of course, Rob's not wrong here - a misadjusted clutch (or even one that needs new fluid or a good bleed) can cause this symptom.
    – Aaron Lavers
    Nov 16 at 6:46






  • 1




    On a car with 275,000km on the original clutch... I mean, odds are
    – J...
    Nov 16 at 13:34










  • Sure, but $50 to have a mechanic check the cable before you spend 10x+ on parts and labor for a clutch isn't absurd.
    – Adonalsium
    Nov 16 at 13:53










  • @Adonalsium it is difficult to check a clutch cable for correct functioning on a car with a hydraulic clutch - asking a mechanic to do that will confirm his opinion of some customers...
    – Solar Mike
    Nov 18 at 6:12


















  • While modern cars can have their clutch engagement point adjusted, it should be noted that an '05 Corolla uses a hydraulic clutch system and not a cable system. Of course, Rob's not wrong here - a misadjusted clutch (or even one that needs new fluid or a good bleed) can cause this symptom.
    – Aaron Lavers
    Nov 16 at 6:46






  • 1




    On a car with 275,000km on the original clutch... I mean, odds are
    – J...
    Nov 16 at 13:34










  • Sure, but $50 to have a mechanic check the cable before you spend 10x+ on parts and labor for a clutch isn't absurd.
    – Adonalsium
    Nov 16 at 13:53










  • @Adonalsium it is difficult to check a clutch cable for correct functioning on a car with a hydraulic clutch - asking a mechanic to do that will confirm his opinion of some customers...
    – Solar Mike
    Nov 18 at 6:12
















While modern cars can have their clutch engagement point adjusted, it should be noted that an '05 Corolla uses a hydraulic clutch system and not a cable system. Of course, Rob's not wrong here - a misadjusted clutch (or even one that needs new fluid or a good bleed) can cause this symptom.
– Aaron Lavers
Nov 16 at 6:46




While modern cars can have their clutch engagement point adjusted, it should be noted that an '05 Corolla uses a hydraulic clutch system and not a cable system. Of course, Rob's not wrong here - a misadjusted clutch (or even one that needs new fluid or a good bleed) can cause this symptom.
– Aaron Lavers
Nov 16 at 6:46




1




1




On a car with 275,000km on the original clutch... I mean, odds are
– J...
Nov 16 at 13:34




On a car with 275,000km on the original clutch... I mean, odds are
– J...
Nov 16 at 13:34












Sure, but $50 to have a mechanic check the cable before you spend 10x+ on parts and labor for a clutch isn't absurd.
– Adonalsium
Nov 16 at 13:53




Sure, but $50 to have a mechanic check the cable before you spend 10x+ on parts and labor for a clutch isn't absurd.
– Adonalsium
Nov 16 at 13:53












@Adonalsium it is difficult to check a clutch cable for correct functioning on a car with a hydraulic clutch - asking a mechanic to do that will confirm his opinion of some customers...
– Solar Mike
Nov 18 at 6:12




@Adonalsium it is difficult to check a clutch cable for correct functioning on a car with a hydraulic clutch - asking a mechanic to do that will confirm his opinion of some customers...
– Solar Mike
Nov 18 at 6:12










josi is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










 

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