The easiest way to bleed any brake system is with a vacuum bleeder which pulls the fluid out at the wheels rather than forcing it through from the master cylinder. I use one on every brake bleed at the shop and it eliminates all the various adapters needed for the pressure type. I just finished my 58 brakes and have a perfect pedal first time around. By the way the 57 to 59 booster is 2 nuts and 2 bolts and a vacuum line, I dare anybody to try to screw up the re and re, you don't even have to bleed the brakes. Ernie -----Original Message----- From: mailing-list-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:mailing-list-owner@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Hugh & Therese Sent: December 21, 2003 10:18 AM To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: IML: 57/58/59 brakes - Achilles heel Paul wrote, in response to Bill,: > I think the brake booster on the '59 Imperial is rather easy to > remove. > > Paul > Bill wrote: Your idea of bringing it to a local brake shop, and > > then sending the unit out to Karps sounds very promising. I surmise that what is easy for some is not for others. We have different strengths and weaknesses. I agree with Paul as far as this - removing the booster is indeed quite easy. Taking the booster apart, having acquired a new exterior, and putting it back together is also not rocket science. However . . . this is really where the problem(s) begin. I went to the web site and checked out the 1960s. (Lovely cars, by the way.) I notice they have a better type of brake booster on them, hopefully one that will allow more reasonable access to the master cylinder. The problem with the 57/58/59 era is that accessing the master cylinder with a power bleeder is nigh on impossible. For routine maintenance, this is just a nettlesome quirk. However it really becomes a nightmare when it comes to bleeding the system when the master cylinder is being reinstalled. Someone, somewhere, out there has a power bleeder that was designed to fit the round, single pot, master cylinder that is situated bang right up close beneath the overhanging bellows unit. Unfortunately no one seems to know who this fortunate individual is. I have taken my car to brake shops that turned out to be unable to even remove the hubs on the rear wheels, because they lacked the requisite puller. I have had another which did the whole job. Almost. They could not bleed the brakes. I had to get a wrecker to get my 'almost' fixed car back to the museum. With air in the brake lines it was too unsafe to drive. I was a little beyond disgruntled about this, you may be sure. I have had more problems with the brakes on my 1958 than everything else put together. They have been a recurring problem. Rebuilt master cylinders have failed so frequently that I was obligated to upgrade to a more modern, twin pot style, if only because I no longer believe the single pot style can ever be said to be safe. My car was in an accident at 5 MPH when the brakes failed again. Regrettably, I ran into the back of a Dodge pick up. The difference in bumper height held to huge damage to the Imperial even though the pick up was virtually unscratched. With the new master cylinder, from a Dodge of the mid 1960s that still had all around drums, I was able to, at last, be able to power bleed my brakes, though it took a certain amount of ingenuity and determination to make it work. My point is that opinions with regard to how easy working on these brakes may or may not be don't add up to a hill of beans. With the 57/58/59 Imperial, you are dealing with a designed in Achilles heel and you just have to do the best you can with what you have. Good luck finding a shop that will try to do it. Even more good luck in finding one that can actually do the job. I would find it impossible to criticize anyone who puts on a newer type of booster and a better master cylinder. I have not replaced my original style of booster out of a sheer pig headed desire to keep my car as original as possible. There is an odd element that I cannot help but remark on here. If you try my truck inner tube over the broken booster temporary repair, nothing has to be removed so you get working brakes for basically nothing, except the effort of installing the tube over the bellows unit. Under Bill's circumstances it is definitely the route I would take until a shop that will and can do the job is found. The shop will need the right equipment, and that is not going to be easy to find. If Karpps has gone to the trouble of recreating the rubber for the bellows unit and also does the installation, they would be the best people to tackle the job. A phone call to them will answer that question. Being as far away from them as Texas, taking my car to them was not an option. Hugh