DerStrom8
Super Moderator
I see two possibilities.
The oil leak has caused the clutch to slip. I saw this once on an old '50s Jaguar. The Jag looked like my Dad's 2.4 L but this one was a 3 point something. A bad gasket caused oil to slowly leak on the clutch. A temporary "fix" was to engage the clutch with the engine revved up so as to burn off the oil. What the heck! The clutch was toast anyway.
However, I think your problem occurred suddenly, so instead of a bad clutch, you have a broken drive link somewhere. This broken link, whatever it is, is now a piece of metal free to move around inside the drive train, has interfered with the motion of another part, and has punched a hole in either the transmission gear case or the engine block, creating an oil leak. It sounds awfully expensive.
Yikes, that's kind of scary
I've had so many suggestions of what could be wrong, I'm just hoping that's not the problem--that fix would cost more than the car is worth :/
I still have the slave cylinder ready to put in, and I haven't been able to get anyone to do it yet My friend will be coming to do it soon, I just have to figure out when.
Thanks for the help guys!
Der Strom