Yes, the 1995 Suzuki Sidekick does have a slave cylinder as part of its manual transmission system. The slave cylinder is responsible for engaging and disengaging the clutch. If you're experiencing issues with the clutch or shifting, it could be related to the slave cylinder or other hydraulic components in the system.
Suzuki Sidekick has a cable for the clutch. No fluid required. If it hard to push or seems to 'stick' then replace the cable.
Counter clockwise
The slave cylinder for a hydraulic clutch is inside the manual transmission bell housing
I had this problem with my 95 sidekick. It was the fuel filter gone bad.
chances are in the glove box on the top right side. my 93 was wierd like that.
Two separate problems; the bogging is probably due to the #1 problem with today's cars : a weak fuel pump/plugged fuel filter. Get that fixed first. You may have a weak clutch slave cylinder which causes hard shifting.
Hydraulic and the slave cylinder is in the bell housing.
It is straight underneath the starter
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The slave cylinder is located on the front top side of the transmission. It is held in place by two bolts. The easiest way to find it is to trace the hydraulic line from the filler cup to the slave cylinder. This is the same for all 92-97's. I am not sure about any other year.
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.
see CEL page and BAD ECU PAGE. here world wide web dot kick-fix dot com (<dig?)