Ok. To go back a bit in my story.
Before I put the DB quaife upgrade in I used to run a standard gearbox, no upgrades at all. I had a 6 paddle AP friction plate and an AP 2800 lbs pressure plate. An AP clutch release bearing on the Renault carrier. I used a 0.7 inch master cylinder and the standard Renault slave cylinder whatever size that is. Standard Renault bell housing and GTD adaptor plate. Really, all fairly standard stuff. All worked just fine with a nice weight and feel to the clutch.
To put in the DB upgrade I needed to change the friction plate only as the spline is different. A 6 paddle was not available so a 4 paddle plate was used. I measured the thickness of the friction plate and it is identical to the one I took off the car. Also diameter of the plate is the same. Everything else remained as before including master cylinder.
When I first tried to use the car I found I could not disengage the clutch. Previously the bite point was in the top half on the pedal movement. Why had it moved forward? Speaking to others I was told I needed to change the master cylinder to a bigger size as that was the only solution they had come across when fitting the DB upgrade. I tried every master cylinder going up in small increments each time noticing the disengagment point was coming back into the footwell. Only when I got to a 1 inch master cylinder did the bite point occur fully inside the cabin. Don't worry, checks were made to ensure other mechanical linkages were properly aligned etc and all ok.
Why on earth the bite point moves when I use the same cover plate, the same release bearing and a friction plate of the same thickness is beyond me. So far no-one has been able to explain that. There is no logic to it.
As I increased the master cylinder size the weight of the pedal increased as you would expect.
So as you can now hopefully see, if I change master cylinder size downwards then the pedal is too long. Change the slave and from the comment above it gets even heavier. Not sure why someone would wish to sell me a smaller slave cylinder if the effect would be to worsen the position I am in, but hey ho!
It is interesting to note that Howard has a DB upgarde but only had to up the size of his master cylinder to 3/4 inch. But a different clutch set up is mentioned so maybe that is all he needed.
The clutch works perfectly and there is no slippage. In competitive driving and on track work, I have not really had an issue with the heavy clutch. But now my car is retired from competition I wish it to be more streetable.
I know of one chap who put a servo on the clutch to make it lighter but it lead to other issues so was removed.
Others use different pedal boxes and don't have this issue but I am not prepared to start swapping pedal boxes for this.
I can live with the bite point position, maybe a bit further down the pedal movement than ideal, but it is ok. I just wish for a lighter pedal so when Wendy drives the car it is easier for her. It is the only heavy part of driving left in the car!
I don't see how a one peice shaft could alter the clutch feel. The only difference on the shaft inside the bell housing area is the spline that the friction plate rides over. It is free moving so is not binding.
If the issue is with an expanding clutch pipe I think that could lend weight to my position that it is the pipe size causing a resistance to moving the greater amount of fluid. However I only have braided hoses from the master cylinder to the hard pipe at the front bulkhead and a braided hose from the hard pipe by the gearbox to the salve cylinder. They are not going to expand this much to absorb the extra fluid generated by having a larger master cylinder.
So there is the whole story now. Between us I think we must have covered every angle.