What does the Clutch PTO actually do?
I replaced the Driveshaft on my 1989 SP and greesed the shaft boot. I checked the PTO splines and they seemed fair. I took the seadoo out for a test drive and it would not go very fast but the engine was reving up to speed. It seemed like the shaft was spinning in the pto again but when I checked it it wasn't. The shaft was fine and the pto and shaft were not even warm from friction. After about 10 minutes it started working just fine. It worked all weekend. I probably drove it 20 hours total. When I took it out one week later it did the same thing but only acted normal for about 30 minutes before resuming the slow, overspeeding state. It would not speed up after an hour or so, so I put it away.
I have a new PTO clutch. I have only heard of the splines wearing out on these and not the clutch itself.
My question is: Does the PTO clutch have moving parts inside that could malfunction? Does it work like a centrifugal clutch?
I replaced the Driveshaft on my 1989 SP and greesed the shaft boot. I checked the PTO splines and they seemed fair. I took the seadoo out for a test drive and it would not go very fast but the engine was reving up to speed. It seemed like the shaft was spinning in the pto again but when I checked it it wasn't. The shaft was fine and the pto and shaft were not even warm from friction. After about 10 minutes it started working just fine. It worked all weekend. I probably drove it 20 hours total. When I took it out one week later it did the same thing but only acted normal for about 30 minutes before resuming the slow, overspeeding state. It would not speed up after an hour or so, so I put it away.
I have a new PTO clutch. I have only heard of the splines wearing out on these and not the clutch itself.
My question is: Does the PTO clutch have moving parts inside that could malfunction? Does it work like a centrifugal clutch?
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