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#1
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See anything wrong with my rear drum brakes?
Do you see anything wrong with these?
Changed my (1" bore) MC and I'm working on a brake pedal that goes down about a quarter way then.have very grabby front brakes (discovered while driving in the rain). Pedal goes down then very very touchy and grabby.. one toe and almost lockup fronts.) Front shoes are new, no contamination. . 4 wheel power drums on the car. The rod from booster to MC has about 1/8" play and brake pedal pin is in lower hole. Im concentrating on the rear brakes lately because the stock 2 stage MC has to pressurize the rears before the fronts because of the linear design of the MC. Im thinking the sinking pedal is rooted in problem with the rear, but I dont see anything wrong. I built a pressurization brake bleeder which I added about 15psi (at the MC) to the rear brake circut, and with the MC unbolted from the booster , and in a level position, I flowed alot of fluid through the rear bleeders and saw no air. After all that and for good measure, I had a helper get on the brake pedal and (several times each side) do 3 presses and a 4th press and hold where I bled them again. No air. Also while under the car and turning the rear wheels, I noticed they would stop turning when the pedal was pressed so the rear brakes were activating, and adjusted to have a slight drag. Emergency brake cable loose and brake shoes on the pins. I hate to take this to a brake shop and spend a bunch of money. I thought I knew how to fix these things. This just dont make sense to me. Last edited by Hotrodjohn71; 01-14-2023 at 01:27 PM. |
#2
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What car?
My first guess is not to suspect the rear brakes at all. Don't take it to someone else. Just take a step back and start over.
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Kent R. |
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#3
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It's a 67 Firebird, all stock. 4 wheel power drum brakes.
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#4
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Mismatching brake linings can easily make drums brakes grab. Look at the edge of the brake lining, and see what designation the front and rear shoes have, FE, and FF are common designations. It tells what composition the lining is. Ideally you would like the front and the rear to match on a 4 wheel drum brake system.
Just to show you how much it matters, I used to drive 18 wheelers, the mechanics for some reason only replaced one half of a set of brakes on the steer axle. When braking it would literally rip the wheel out of your hands. They tried all kinds of adjustments, and parts swapping to cure the problem. Finally someone looked at the brake linings side to side, and determined that they didn't match. Replace the linings with new ones, and no pull at all. They screwed around with it nearly a week before they found the problem. You say the problem showed up after changing brake shoes, so it's not far fetched to have a mismatch, all brake linings are not created equal, and it's not hard to check. My preference is new linings, and new shoes that are riveted, not relined shoes, and not bonded linings. For over 50 years twisting wrenches my findings are that cheap linings, and relined bonded shoes will give you inferior brake jobs. |
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#5
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First. Thank you to all of you. I am carefully going over your advice
I've been driving the car around today. I've got a pedal that goes down about half way then the brakes come on quick and strong. Not grabbing after changing the rear shoes. I would like to be able to fix that pedal drop and it will be great. I can say with certainty that my master cylinder is a 1" bore. I measured the new one and the old one and both 1". All of the research I've done shows that the 4 wheel drum cars had a 1" bore, and also., that's what aftermarket lists. Regarding the booster to Mc pushrod, I have just under 1/8" play measured by putting some body putty on the rod, assembling the setup., and measuring the crush height of the clay. I have no fluid loss in the reservoirs, no tracable leaks, all adjusters are set up for a light drag on the wheels. All shoes are also new and of same brand. I took a video of my Mc with the lid off : https://youtube.com/shorts/5uTBwojVVnw?feature=share and right when I press the pedal, there is a 'slight' geyser effect right when the pedal is pushed, and then no effect on release of pedal. Are the 10lb residual pressure valves (either in-master, or wildwood inline inserts) designed to keep the inner cups in the wheel cylinders against the wheel cylinder push rods? I'm wondering if that possible variable in 4 wheels could be causing the pedal drop. There is no "spongy" when the pedal drops halfway, but I am certain the Mc is being engaged. I found a Mc on ebay that looks in very good shape. I am hoping it will have the rpv's in good shape because I would like the original look. Any thoughts? Last edited by Hotrodjohn71; 01-20-2023 at 11:43 PM. |
#6
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Make sure you have all the air bled from the lines (farthest to the closest bleeding order).
Double check your booster vacuum line and connections. Power booster plunger rod is original to the car, and was originally inserted into the bottom hole on your brake pedal? All brakes adjusted with a slight drag? Zero leakage at the wheel cylinders?
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Cholesterol Bad Adrenaline Good Do it till your eyes bug out! |
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#7
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Did it always do this or has something changed recently? Are you sure the booster isn’t doing something weird. Maybe try a known good one if you can find one. Just spitballin!
Good luck! Murf |
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#8
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are there new wheel cylinders in there? I had a 67 with power drums that would pull to the right all the time under light braking, but was fine on a hard stop. no matter how I adjusted the brakes or how many times I bled the brakes, I couldn't get it to brake straight with a light pedal. I ended up just changing it over to power discs after screwing with it for a year since I'd planned on upgrading the stopping power anyways. a few years ago a PY member was looking for original wheel cylinders to rebuild so I pulled my stuff and took them apart to clean up the rust and caked brake dust. I found the left front wheel cylinder had some grime in the bore and the metal cups were hanging up, So a hard push on the pedal would get them to move, but they didn't want to move without the extra pressure. they weren't frozen, they just didn't like moving freely and weren't really dragging without the pedal. also not a drop of fluid leaking to indicate anything was up with it so i ignored them as a possible culprit.
Just a thought on something to check. you can pop the cylinders apart carefully and not damage them for reassembly just to check the bores in them. |
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#9
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Did the 67 come with a distribution block?
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Cholesterol Bad Adrenaline Good Do it till your eyes bug out! |
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#10
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First of all are you ABSOLUTELY sure that the 2 master cylinders are the same bore? If your new one has a SMALLER bore it could easily cause your brakes to be very touchy. Don't assume that they are. Measure them. You don't have to remove the new one completely. Leave the lines attached and just pull it back from the booster and measure it. Also is there play between the booster push rod and the bottom of the hole in the back of the master?
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#11
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Thanks for the replies.
This car has a distribution block but not a proporting valve. I went through the distribution block when I changed the MC. It was clean as a whistle. I checked the length of the booster to MC rod by using a little bit of dumb dumb clay on the end of the rod and bolting everything together and I adjusted the rod to have a little under 1/8" of play. The reason I had to dive into the brakes is because the car started developing a front brake drag that got progressively worse. At some point, I deduced that the problems cause might have been that the booster to MC adjusting rod, being an adjustable style, might have screwed-out over time causing the MC to not return to its resting position. This makes sense because when the brakes would drag, I had a very very high pedal that responded immediately with the slightest push. So when I was adjusting that rod length while installing the new MC, I noticed that there was no resistance in the crimp side of the rod threads and it just turned freely in the threads. So I made a locknut the same diameter of the rod itself and that took care of that. I did check the MC bore size between the old and new. It was 1". I just picked up a new set of new rear brake shoes of the same style and brand as the fronts. I'm going to install those soon and see if theres any improvements. |
#12
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I wanted to come back to this thread to put a period at the end of the problem and thank everyone for their contributions.
I got my issue solved by finding a master cylinder that would accept the residual pressure valves. I was blessed to find a master cylinder on eBay that was not only unused, but it had the stamping correct for our firebird and also it had the bleeder screws on the master cylinder itself which aided greatly in bleeding the master cylinder during the brake bleeding process. That Master cylinder, although having provision for the residual pressure valves, did not actually have them. Finding a brake master cylinder rebuild kit for that 1-in bore with the two residual pressure valves, for the front drums and rear drums, was a challenge. But I was able to find one. All of that brought the pedal up to a good height. Then after installing all of that I still had extremely sensitive brakes. Like one-toe braking which was awful for a panic stop. I considered the advice that the 11 inch booster on our car was too much boost causing the grabby brakes ( even though, apparently for the power all drum brake 67 firebirds, the only option was an 11 inch booster) as was shared here in this thread. I obtained a nice Delco Moraine 9" unit and installed it and it's a world of difference. So the residual pressure valves gave me a higher pedal and the smaller booster gave me a good pedal that wasn't extremely sensitive. While going over all of this, I noticed that on the 62 to 67 Chevy Nova and Chevy 2, for the aftermarket power brake booster kits for their (all drum cars), those kits used a 9 inch booster. Thank you for all of your help and advice in this problem, it is solved. |
#13
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See anything wrong with my rear drum brakes?
Is the side with more meat on the front or back? It’s been a min but I believe the bigger pad goes on the front, if not the breaks are garbage and the e brake will not hold for anything
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77 T/A- poncho 400| T-10|3.23| I beams|Hyper flat top pistons|Kre heads|Scorpion rockers|Xr276 hydro roller|Rpm intake|Smi qjet|Subframe connectors|Rancho sways|Mcleod super street|hydro clutch|More i cant remember |
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#14
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Primary shoe on backwards on passenger side?
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#15
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The shoes are installed correctly on both sides.
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‘63 LeMans- ‘69 400 w/ original transaxle. 2.69 gears. ‘55 Catalina ‘62 Mercury Meteor-all original, bought new by my grandfather 71' GTO -original 400/4-speed/3.23 posi 13.95 @ 102.1 on street tires @ 4055lbs.-now my sons ride |
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#16
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I would sooner think your problem is in the front. Jack up the car and have someone step on the brakes while you check to see if the front brakes release completely. You could have front brake rubber hoses that are partially restricted.
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#17
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Have you checked the MC? I don't care how new, or how cautiously rebuilt things are, Murphy's Law always supercedes that!
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Cholesterol Bad Adrenaline Good Do it till your eyes bug out! |
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#18
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I changed out my rear brake shoes with a similar set to the front. It makes sense that after the brake drag, there could have been some glazing on the rear shoes.
So things have improved a little bit. Right now I have a pedal that goes down about 1 1/2 inches and then I have brakes. I could live with this but I would like to try to improve it all the same. How necessary are these residual pressure valves that used to come in the outlet ports of factory drum brake master cylinders? My research shows that these are not installed in any of the aftermarket Master cylinders including the one I bought. What was the purpose, and how necessary are they? Last edited by Hotrodjohn71; 01-19-2023 at 12:44 PM. |
#19
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They hold a small amount of pressure on the wheel cylinders so you don't have to move the pedal as far to get the pistons to apply. Especially important on older cars where the master cylinder is under the floor.
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#20
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I also have yet to see an aftermarket MC with the residual valves installed.
A few years back when I spoke to MP Brakes about the absence of them in their MCs I was told that the residual valves are not absolutely necessary but they are recommended and to not use them at my own discretion. The problem with the aftermarket MCs is that they are not machined to accommodate the factory type residual valves, at least the ones I have seen. So, one option is to add the inline residual valves. I did not want to go with the inline valves so I took a chance, hoping there was enough material in the aftermarket casting to allow for machining. Fortunately, there was and it worked out well for me. Dave
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68 GTO 68 LeMans 68 LeMans Convertible 79 Firebird |
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