Ah, yes, the elephant analogy. Perhaps not a shining example of
decorous discourse, but still serviceable, in its own way.
The good news is that if you can get the car to Karpps there is no reason
why you cannot drive back in your own car. The will take, I am sure, your
old one as a core and replace it with a properly functioning unit. I don't
know if they will remove your old one, however. You'd need to
discuss that with them. Frankly, I would be surprised in they
will.
Evidently, you don't want to try to remove it yourself. No
problem. If it ain't your cup of tea then that's OK. Here is what I
would do. If Karpps will do the whole thing, you are one incredibly lucky
guy. Assuming they won't, however, get the car to a brake shop that is
prepared to work on it. (A tow truck will do nicely.) Have them
remove the unit. Take it to Karpps and get your replacement. They
may rebuild yours on the spot. I can do it in less than an hour so they
would be able to get it done faster, without a doubt. Get the rebuilt unit
back to the brake shop and have them reinstall it and bleed your brakes.
The trickiest part of the whole thing is the brake bleeding part, due to
the round single master cylinder and its proximity to the booster. Bench
bleeding the M/C is a must if you are to have any success. Successfully
bleeding the brakes is a truly troublesome aspect of this era of Imperial.
I'd have to say in my ten years of having the 1958 I have had more problems with
this than anything else. When I remove the engine of mine to get it
rebuilt I shall have this to look forward to, again.
Just another one of the joys.
Hugh
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