Discussion:
Creeping in reverse when inching pedal released

I have a Clark C25C, when truck is in drive or neutral and stopped with inching pedal engaged, it will creep backwards when you start to release the inching pedal. It will do the same with the brake pedal. If I unpin the inching pedal from the transmission, it will actually creep forward when in drive, but the brake pedal will still creates the reverse creeping scenario. I have swapped all the relays, and the situation does not change. Any ideas where to look instead of a Transmission rebuild?

Thank you kindly for your help!

Joe
  • Posted 11 Aug 2021 06:51
  • By Joe_Gregor
  • joined 11 Aug'21 - 1 message
  • West Virginia, United States

Post your Reply

Forkliftaction accepts no responsibility for forum content and requires forum participants to adhere to our rules of conduct. Click here for more information.

If you are having trouble using the Discussion Forums, please contact us for help.

Fact of the week
According to studies published in the English Journal of Medicine, the impact of daylight savings is revealed by a 24% increase in heart attacks on the Monday following the spring shift forward. When clocks move back in autumn, heart attacks drop by about 21%, suggesting that loss of sleep is an important driver.
Global Industry News
edition #1258 - 27 November 2025
In this week’s Forkliftaction News , we report on Hyster-Yale laying off staff in the US amid what it describes as “challenging market conditions”... Continue reading
SMV (Konecranes) 4632CC5
Balling, Denmark
New - Sale
UN Forklift FD15-18T
HANGZHOU, Zhejiang, China
New - Sale
Upcoming industry events …
December 4–7, 2025 - Goyang, Korea, Republic Of
March 10-12, 2026 - Hong Kong, Hong Kong
June 30-July 2, 2026 - Birmingham, United Kingdom
Latest job alerts …
Fact of the week
According to studies published in the English Journal of Medicine, the impact of daylight savings is revealed by a 24% increase in heart attacks on the Monday following the spring shift forward. When clocks move back in autumn, heart attacks drop by about 21%, suggesting that loss of sleep is an important driver.