If we are talking about a clutch slave cylinder for a standard transmission, yes it could.
I had to punch a hole in the diagram/plug then use a screw to stop the flow and bleed the slave through a pee hole in the port!
I don't know why you would want to stop gas from going into a cylinder, but there is only one way i can think of. If it is a fuel-injected vehicle, you can disconnect the fuel injector harness from that cylinder, that will stop the injector from firing. If it is has a carb, I don't think there is a way.
This sounds like it is the clutch itself, not the master or the slave. If you can put it in gear and it doesn't move, it has to be the clutch worn out. If it were the master or the slave, it would grind when you tried to put it in gear.
Check the fuzes.
no
Because if the vehicle can not stop it will hit things and cause damage and injury. Indeed it could kill someone.
well mines not a ranger its a ford f250 super cab 7.5 l now how do i stop the clutch pedle from going to the floor
It would cause an accident. People do expect to have a car stopped in a tunnel.
In many jurisdictions, police enter most plates they stop in front of through the data base, but unless you have a warrant on the vehicle, they still need probable cause to pull you over. Better answer is it depends. A Police Officer has discretion and may or may not run your plate. You may have a warrant on the vehicle or a invalid driving status. Those two reasons are enough to stop the vehicle. Furthermore, Probable Cause is not necessary to stop a vehicle. The level needed is Articulable Suspicion and is a lower degree of certainty than Probable Cause.
it may be the slave cylinder or clutch master cylinder
You have a bad Vss Sensor.............. The vehicle speed sensor.
vehicle is still in gear, step on clutch