The pressure plate assy appears to have been modified. It is stamped "Borg & Beck" but you can clearly see someone has added spacers between the pressure plate cover and the diaphragm spring. I don't know if WCF's did this or someone else did. In any case, whoever did it either didn't do it correctly or used spacers of varying thicknesses. This resulted in the uneven clutch diaphragm release fingers upon installation as noted in this photo:

To make matters worse, the cindered iron clutch disc's center hub that contains the spines protrudes outward away from the flywheel in this application so far that it appears as though it will interfere with the clutch throw-out bearing when the clutch pedal is depressed.


Careful measurements using a dial calipers indicate the TO bearing can only push in on the clutch diaphragm spring's release fingers by 0.110" before the TO bearing bottoms out on the clutch disc hub. Correct me if I am wrong but the stock Fiero clutch hydraulic system will move the TO bearing more than 0.110" for a full stroke of the clutch pedal?
The clearance issue appears to be a direct result of the modification of the clutch pressure plate diaphragm spring spacing. Other clutch pressure plates I have seen have not had these spacers installed between the pressure plate cover and the spring. Apparently this "spacing" was done to increase the installed pressure of the pressure plate assy.
I called WCF and asked them specifically about the clearance issue between the TO brg and clutch disc hub and was told "there won't be any problems because we (WCF) had sold and used many of these units". I didn't even bother getting into the issue about the uneven clutch spring fingers because the guy I was talking to didn't seem receptive to my point of view nor line of questioning. I had to explain the clearance situation to him several times before he understood what I was talking about.
So the question is, has anyone ever run into this? Does WCF modify pressure plate diaphragm springs in this way?
-ryan