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Parts for your 2007 Toyota Corolla fielder-Clutch kit

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2007 Toyota Corolla Fielder clutch-kit — what’s fitted and when it matters

Per Toyota technical references for the E150-series Corolla (New Car Features manual and Repair Manual), the 2007 Toyota Corolla Fielder (NZE141/ZRE142) was offered with three transmission types: a 5‑speed manual (C50/C56), a 4‑speed automatic (U341E), and Super CVT‑i (K310/K311). Only the 5‑speed manual uses a serviceable dry single‑plate clutch and therefore a clutch-kit. The auto and CVT models use a torque converter and do not use a conventional clutch-kit. This is consistent with Toyota EPC listings and Aisin/Exedy catalogues that show pressure plate, disc and release bearing only for the manual variants.

For Fielder owners with the 5‑speed manual, a quality clutch-kit is essential gear. It bundles the pressure plate (cover), clutch disc and release/throw‑out bearing, and is designed to transfer engine torque smoothly while allowing clean gear changes. Over time, the friction lining wears, the diaphragm spring can lose clamping force, and the release bearing may get noisy—so a fresh kit restores bite and pedal feel to how the car left the factory.

There’s no fixed replacement interval, it all comes down to driving style and load. Many drivers will see 120,000–200,000 kilometres from a clutch, but lots of hill starts, towing, or city creeping will shorten that. Tell‑tale signs it’s time include slipping under load, a high engagement point, shudder when taking off, chatter, or a growl when the clutch pedal is pressed (release bearing).

  • When replacing, it’s smart practice to machine or replace the flywheel, fit the full kit (disc/cover/bearing), and inspect the pilot bush, fork pivot and rear main seal.
  • The Corolla Fielder manual uses a hydraulic clutch—bleed fresh DOT 3 or DOT 4 brake fluid and check the master/slave cylinders for leaks.
  • Use proper alignment and torque specs from the Toyota Repair Manual, over‑ or under‑torquing the cover bolts can cause chatter.
  • After fitting, bed the clutch in gently for the first 500–800 km—avoid hard launches so the new surfaces mate evenly.

If your Fielder is the 4‑speed auto or Super CVT‑i, a clutch‑kit isn’t relevant because those transmissions use a fluid torque converter. Servicing on those models focuses on the correct Toyota ATF/CVT fluid and software‑safe maintenance, not a manual clutch assembly.

Popular questions

How can I tell if my 2007 Corolla Fielder actually has a clutch?
Check the shifter first: a manual will have a 5‑speed H‑pattern. On the build plate, the “Trans/Axle” code will show C50/C56 for manual, U341E (auto) or K310/K311 (CVT) means there’s no conventional clutch-kit. If it’s PRNDL or shows “M” with +/- on the gate but no clutch pedal, it’s not a manual clutch car.

How long should a clutch last on a Fielder, and what’s normal labour time?
Driven sensibly, many last 120,000–200,000 km. City traffic, towing or enthusiastic driving can shorten that. Typical workshop labour on a front‑drive Corolla is about 4–6 hours, varying with equipment, flywheel condition and whether hydraulic components need attention.

What else should be replaced with the clutch-kit?
Good workshops will resurface or replace the flywheel, renew the release bearing (in the kit), inspect/replace the pilot bush, check the fork and pivot, and consider the rear main seal. A clutch fluid bleed is cheap insurance for a consistent pedal.

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