Help-Update
Hey guys,
So here is how it played out, sorry if its a bit long...
Got the 10mm spanner, bled clutch line (One full reservoir worth) and problem still persisted.
Bit the bullet at 3pm Saturday afternoon and decided to take it to the shop. Got the truck started and warmed up. Put it in 4-low (to save my poor starter). Shut down the truck and then started her in 1st gear. Drove about 2 kilometers through town without the clutch (Did make it into 4th but still in 4-lo

)
Because that wasn't exciting enough the fuel pedal started to stick a bit too. We took it slow and enjoyed ourselves. Transmission felt great... even without the benefit of a clutch
Mechanic went to work right away on the truck. Started by bleeding the clutch again, no luck. Then replaced the slave cylinder (it was leaking a touch), same problem.
Then he rebuilt the Master cylinder, nada
Then he re-plumbed the tubing coming out of the master in hopes of getting more compression from it. This is when I realized (I'm pretty sure) that my fancy HJ-47 Master Cylinder is actually a adapted break Master Cylinder I'm pop a picture up for this, but regardless it didn't improve anything.
At this point it was noon Sunday and it was decided that the problem was deeper than the leaky slave cylinder (Now replaced)
The decision was made to drop the clutch.
By 3pm Monday the Clutch was out and the problem was found, the clutch plates were stuck together. The Mechanic told me he solved this problem by dropping them on the ground a few times until they popper apart.
The plates were in good shape and the mechanic reckoned salt water had gotten in there and allowed them (over the week) to become stuck together.
OOPS!
Now I knew driving in the sea was a bad idea, and I only did it once (Which was the plan) But I would never have guessed the salt water would have found its way into my clutch. I though the clutch was sealed. A colleague of mine says he has a drain in the bottom of his clutch and fills it with water a couple of times after wheeling to clean anything out. Never heard of that before...
We cleaned the plates and put it back together.
All in, 2 days of work (including 1 which was supposed to be his day off), A new slave cylinder and a rebuilt master break/clutch cylinder the total came to about $200.
the clutch feels great now but the transmition doesn't move as freely in neutral as it used to. Before I could move right-left on the shifter while in Neutral and not feel anything other than the spring that keeps you out of reverse. Now as I move across in Neutral it kind of feels like I am bumping somehting. Almost like a gate. Frankly its fine because the 500,000kms on the transmission have made it a bit finicky to get in gear. Now its easy. Other than that all is well...
Still the sticky fuel pedal but I'll save that for anotehr day
