It depends on the quality of clutch in the vehicle you have. my sister used to ride her clutch a lot, as did a few other people i knew. If you are lucky, your clutch may last a year or two... its best not to ride the clutch too much if you can help it.
As long as you don't ' ride the clutch' it is not uncommon to go 100,000 + miles. Trucks will be less if they are worked hard. If you know what you're doing they last a long, long time. My friend has a truck with about 110k on it and it still has the original clutch.
I had to change the clutch at 120,000 kilometers.
As long as my last dump.
yesyes
3 days
It all depends on your driving style and how often the clutch is used. If you do a lot of city driving, the clutch will last far fewer miles than if you drive hundreds of miles without stopping. If you "ride the clutch" when you drive, the clutch might not even make 20,000 miles.
There are 2 ways, you can start a motorcycle. The best is to have the gear in neutral either after your last ride or before you press the starter button. Then all you have to do is turn the key, make sure the fuel tap is on and press the starter button to start the engine. Or if your motorcycle is in first gear already, squeeze the clutch handle in, to disengage the clutch and press the starter button. Only start to release the clutch, as you start to ride.
It should be 'last rode the ride'.
actually i ride bikes and the clutch to change gears is on the left , very few have it on the right
they ride freeon buses and get discount on planes.
Mine is still original at 200000 plus
It depends if you ride on a ruff road but if you just go to skate parks it can last a very long time.