There is no bleed screw on the 3.4 clutch. You have to unbolt the slave cylinder from the trans and drop it down so that it and the line are lower than the master cylinder, then pump the piston in/out to force any trapped air up to the master cylinder.
The same way you bleed brakes, but use the little bleeder valve on the slave cylinder. The same way you bleed brakes, but use the little bleeder valve on the slave cylinder.
Replace the slave cylinder.
The bleed valve is located on the drivers side of the bell housing.
The clutch bleed valve on a 2.2 liter Chevy Ecotec engine is located on the slave cylinder. To find the slave cylinder remove the battery, as it is mounted underneath the battery tray.
On the clutch slave cylinder
The clutch can't be adjusted. It is an hydraulic clutch. The clutch pedal sends pressure from the master cylinder to the slave cylinder on the clutch. IF you are having trouble with it the thing to do is bleed the air out at the slave cylinder. Have an assistant pump the clutch and hold it to the floor. Then open the bleed valve on the slave cylinder to let the air out of the system. On the final bleed hold the clutch to the floor and close the bleed valve on the slave cylinder. The clutch master cylinder operates of the brake fluid reservoir. Make sure you keep this full of brake fluid as you bleed the clutch.
just bleed it like you would your brakes, the bleeder valve should be right on it, you could replace it with a speed bleeder to make it easier, or use a vaacuum pump
It is on top of the slave cylinder hope this helps
Thru the bleed valve on the slave cylinder attached to the transmission.
remove 2 bolts holding it on,then replace, follow line back to bleeder valve,bleed,then bleed at slave cylinder
To bleed a clutch on a Nissan Stanza, you need to find the bleed-off valve, usually somewhere near the slave cylinder.
To bleed the clutch slave cylinder on an Audi TT, first, ensure the clutch fluid reservoir is filled with the appropriate brake fluid. Locate the bleed valve on the slave cylinder, typically positioned on the transmission. Use a wrench to loosen the bleed valve while a helper depresses the clutch pedal, allowing fluid and air to escape. Once fluid runs clear without bubbles, tighten the valve, and check the fluid level before closing the reservoir.