Hybrid View
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06-04-2009 09:10 AM #1
Donnie---the very reason that I posted this 'how to" was to take some of the mystery out of it got others who want to do the same thing. The front change over was so simple that I am sure the back must not be any more complicated. Its kind of a long jaunt from Ontario to B.C., or I would come over and help this afternoon.---BrianOld guy hot rodder
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06-04-2009 12:39 PM #2
To dial in the brakes you need to perform tests at varying speeds to ensure the rears don't lock up ahead of the fronts at any speed you drive; particularly highway speeds. This article explains a simple procedure to use. If you notice stock cars for example their rears always lock up first coming into the pits but not out on the track. Albeit this is an extreme example ............
http://www.chevyhiperformance.com/te...lve/index.html
KitzJon Kitzmiller, MSME, PhD EE, 32 Ford Hiboy Roadster, Cornhusker frame, Heidts IFS/IRS, 3.50 Posi, Lone Star body, Lone Star/Kitz internal frame, ZZ502/550, TH400
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06-05-2009 09:21 AM #3
Good post, Brian. Glad you din't let the old stick-in-the-mud traditionalists get to you too much; I haven't been over there for a while - guess I'll have to go see what the ruction was about.I have been a fan of disc brakes since I first learned about them in 1960; the helicopters and other aircraft I worked on had them, and I could not understand why auto manufactureres wouldn't use them on cars. Fortunately, they saw the light, and discs started showing up on cars in the late sixties. One thing that was hammered into my head then (1960) was that disc brakes are a "floating system"; they don't work well otherwise. In the case of the ones you just installed, and indeed almost all automotive systems, the calipers float; this keeps everything sort of "self aligned and adjusted"; on the aircraft I worked on, and probably still the same today, the rotors "float" instead of the calipers - but the result is still the same. As to the residual check valves, they function in two ways; first, the residual helps to keep the pads close enough to the rotors so the appropriate amount of pedal movement is maintained; the check keeps fluid "at" the calipers and wheel cylinders - if the check valves weren't in the system, you would need a huge master cylinder and reservoir to be able to handle the amount of fluid to be moved to have a functioning sytem. O'course, you all probably already knew that.
Rrumbler, Aka: Hey you, "Old School", Hairy, and other unsavory monickers.
Twistin' and bangin' on stuff for about sixty or so years; beat up and busted, but not entirely dead - yet.
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