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#21 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Eastern Tennessee
Posts: 12,248
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Quote:
BTW, would you feel confident with your converted hydraulics if you went a year or two without checking the master cylinder fluid level? |
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#22 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Napier, New Zealand
Posts: 2,001
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Who would go even one year without checking the master cylinder level? Even on my new car I check once a month.
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#23 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Eastern Tennessee
Posts: 12,248
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Quote:
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#24 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Auburn, Kentucky
Posts: 199
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I would never put juice brakes on a model A unless it had a V-8 power plant. I have 100 HP model B engine in my Tudor sedan and it stops on a dime even on the HWY cruseing at 60 and stoping they don't fade. I can run right in town with heavy traffic and feel very comfortable only problem is rain and the skinny tires not a lot of surface on the pavement. If you put cast iron drums on (that is a must) and replace all the worn out bushings, levers and pins and install the soft linings you will be amazed how well the original Ford brakes will be. You can even let go of the steering wheel it stops so straight.
Bill |
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#25 |
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Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: arlington tn
Posts: 68
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Stick brakes are fine on my motorbike,but my A has hyd and i like them
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#26 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Eastern Tennessee
Posts: 12,248
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Quote:
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#27 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Illinois
Posts: 2,249
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I had mechanical brakes with all new parts,cast iron drums and floaters. They would stop great. The only trouble is, they were erratic. They would work fine for 2-3 months and then one day at the worst moment grab and shudder in the front.
After 3 years I gave up and put on Bendix hydraulics. Couldn't be happier. |
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#28 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: new britain,ct 06052
Posts: 9,428
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I think that people converting to hydraulic brakes feel more comfortable with their understanding of their adj and operation. Not having done anything with my brakes yet but have red thru Les Andrews on how to it seems intimidating, rollers, cams, weld up and grind, etc. I've had 32's w/ hyd brake conversion and 40's and easy to understand how they work and how to adj the eccentrics, etc. JMO
Paul in CT |
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#29 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Savannah, GA
Posts: 1,300
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Quote:
Drop a 2 HP motor on your 10 Speed, and your caliper brakes won't last very long. Ted's might help if the shoes/drums are in excellent condition. I can hold my car with the brakes at higher engine speed than I could before conversion. That doesn't mean you won't have fading, but you can put more force into the brake rods/cranks/pins and hence the shoes with less leg force.
__________________
20 years ago we had Johnny Cash, Steve Jobs, and Bob Hope. Now we have no Cash, no Jobs, and no Hope...please don't let Kevin Bacon die! |
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#30 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: South East NJ
Posts: 3,398
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Having had to repair the brakes on a 39 Ford and a 65 Mustang many times I wondered how others faired in my area. The basic problem is usually one or both rear wheel cylinders with get partially or fully stuck from muck.
The problem is simple. In our area we get wide temp swings during the colder months. The temp differentials can cause the fluid to push through the seals and then suck back in with the moisture. The same process that gives you a good whiskey. So at car shows I started asking people with juice brakes. I asked all years and makes. It was scary the number of people that have been driving their cars with moderate to significant pull when they brake. They had no intention of fixing the brakes because they only drove the car a little. The only fix for the brake problem is either climate control or driving often. A local guy, one of the Millers that owns Carlisle, has his cars in a climate controlled room. He has never had a brake problem. I would also like to point out that with juice brakes you still have to make sure the shoes are arched to fit the drums. It could take years to get full brake surface contact if you do not fit the shoes to the drums. You need to find someone with a brake shoe grinder. So as much as people do not want to listen. The juice brakes are at best equal in braking and more likely to have failures that reduce the total braking. Mechanical brakes take just as much work to set up properly and are unlikely to fail if you select good original parts and certain reproduction parts. Seems like a no brainer to stick with mechanical brakes. FWIW we sold the 39 as it was a pain to keep on the road. My 65 convertible Mustang is driven much more often just so I do not have to do more brake work. |
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#31 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Northport, NY
Posts: 1,597
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Hi BCCHOPIT,
Instead of going to juice brakes, consider CAST IRON brake drums with your mechanical brakes, which are three times thicker than your present steel drums and made from material which expands less than steel drums, thus pretty much eliminating brake fade. I live in a very hilly area and I am thrilled how I still have plenty of brake power at the stop signs at the bottoms of the steep hills which I did not have before going to the cast iron drums. Good luck ! |
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#32 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Cape Cod
Posts: 1,129
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Group,
The Ford Service Bulletins detail a method to set the brakes. However, I have not seen in the bulletins a method to hold the brake at the precise lengths. Andrews book shows a tool to make...What did the Ford Techs use ? Marc |
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#33 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Torrington, CT
Posts: 609
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Thanks for the input guys... I just have to decide if I wont to spend 600 bucks on parts and hope I like them or less then 200 bucks to get the the 48 juice brakes on and know I will be happy. I know all about brake fade in big 1970 cars my buddy in high school almost killed me 3 or 4 time but today my friends AV8 has over 250 hp and he drives like a jack ass and never gets brake fade the car is too light
thanks Bill UP DATE!!!! I put 35 brakes up front and 32 brakes out back. Used Teds kits on all 4 corners and the car stops On a dime I could not be happier. I don't even think about my brakes they just work. I can drive hard and Have 0 problems for 3 years now. Last edited by BCCHOPIT; 11-13-2013 at 11:03 AM. |
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