Jim,
I have a couple questions about this conversion. This is more or less
what I did with my Windsor, but I had a couple difficulties you didn't
mention.
First of all, I had to remove the anti-sway bar to make the spindles
fit. Second, I had to remove the calipers to bleed them because the
angle makes the bleed hole too low; air remains trapped in the caliper
unless you remove the caliper and tilt it so the bottom of the bleed
screw's hole is at the top.
Did you find a work-around for either of these problems?
Since I have the Polyhead, I don't have the clearance problems ya'll
are mentioning.
Thanks,
Andy in Friendswood
'58 Windsor 4hdtp
http://www.houstonmopars.org/pos58.html
============================
-----Original Message-----
From: Fury Jim <JRawa@xxxxxxx>
To: L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Mon, 21 Apr 2008 7:22 am
Subject: Re: [FWDLK] Brake conversion.
the pattern for the 4-bolt master starts in 56 [definitely 56 plym at
least] and continues up until 78, in 79 chrysler started using the
2-bolt master [aspen/volare, cordoba/mirada/magnum]
the difference between the lowboy and regular drum-issue masters and a
disc-brake master is the residual pressure check valve- a drum master
has the valve to retain apply pressure in the system, a disc master
does not as a full pressure retraction is necessary to release the
caliper, using a drum master with discs prematurely wears the pads and
creates excess heat- its not enough pressure to cause a notable drag,
but you will see reduced pad life/efficiency.
the sure-working conversion i [and several others] use is the factory
disc setup found on the aspen/volare, mirada/cord/magnum, and the 80s
rwd fifth ave/diplomats. the spindels have the same balljoint
configuration/taper, the C to C is 1-1/8 shorter, requiring a camber
adjustment, the only minor mods to make are a shortening of the strut
rod end to adjust lock-to-lock, and a notch in the snubber perch to
clear the caliper on full lock turning.
as for master cyl, the clearance is a little tight, but i use the 74-77
D100 master cylinder religiously on my 57-9 cars [and a few newer over
the years like my 62 dodge convt] and- if you're using aaj brakes, you
probably already have a GM caliper, so the following tip wont scare
you- its obvious the only safe way to run disc frt/drum rear setup is
with a proportioning valve.... the GM A-body prop has the perfect bias
for the weight distribution on the 57-9 body. but that info is founded
solely on experimentation [i've only done the entire conversion about
17 times, with 7 awaiting in the next year or so as i write]
as for the adapter plate, it will bolt on and allow use of the 2-bolt.
but instead of buying one, you can just redrill the firewall/plate to
2-bolt configuration, make a spacer plate to close the area, and use
the 4 existing studs to retain the plate... did that twice too, on a
parts-laying-around to fix daily drivers. the spacer is cast and can
crack- pushing the master out of the way=no stopping
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