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On my 72 all I did (before the spin-on adaptor) was to unscrew that bolt
and tilt the whole thing up and out.  I never had much of a problem
getting the thing off.  It was getting back on and SEALED that was the
problem.
Joe Burlein
On Mon, 31 Jan 2000 11:15:38 -0500 Day.John@fin.gc.ca writes:
> 
> You don't really have to 'remove' it Cliff - you can remove the 
> driver-side
> bolt, and 'pivot' the slave out of the way, leaving all else 
> attached. A
> pain in the butt, but not too bad. JD
> 
>       -----Original Message-----
>       From:   Cliff Davies [SMTP:ads.holzher@sympatico.ca]
>       Sent:   January 31, 2000 10:57 AM
>       To:     triumphs
>       Subject:        TR6 Oil Canister Removal
> 
> 
>       I would like to remove the oil filter canister out of the 
> car to
> clean
>       and paint, it looks like I will have to remove the clutch 
> slave
> cylinder
>       to do this,  is this the only way?
>       TIA
>       Cliff
>       73 TR6
>       
Joe Burlein
72 TR-6
Melbourne, FL
Real cars are designed to carry only two people, anything else is just a
bus.
http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.
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