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My 70 Charger had 4 wheel 10" manual drum brakes until 2001. I bought the car in 2000 and within a year I swapped in some 11" discs from a 75 Dart along with the MC and booster. I also used the OEM proportioning valve from the Dart.
In 2006 I pulled the rear drums and installed a rear disc kit offered by Dr Diff. It consist of 10.7" Toyota vented rotors, Ford Cobra calipers with a 1.75 bore and a custom mounting bracket.
At the time I was running a '509 cam in my 493 and the 5-6" of idle vacuum made slow speed stops difficult. I thought that a switch to manual brakes would be an improvement. I figured that the stopping power would be equal to or greater than the power setup ever was.
Wrong.
I tried 4 master cylinders with different bore sizes. The biggest was a 1 1/4". I also tried a 1" and 2 different 15/16" units. Every one of them gave pretty much the same results: FIRM pedal but terrible braking performance. It was actually unsafe to drive over 20 mph and I am not an over cautious guy. I brake tested each MC and only once was I able to get the tires to skid. I weigh 195 and I gave the pedal everything I had.
I was baffled as to why the car wouldn't stop. I tried using different proportioning valves. I tried drum brake units, disc brake units....Each time I drove the car I got the same thing. I asked around to see if anyone had any insight. I didn't get much help then even though there were some suggestions. Finally I did what I really hate: I admitted defeat and put the power booster back on.
I want to try again. With my history still clear in my mind, what other changes should I consider to make this work? The smallest MC I tried was a 15/16" one. I tried both drum/drum combo valves and disc/drum prop valve. Neither were modified. Yesterday I read that Dr Diff suggests to use a gutted drum/drum brake combination valve. Could this have made the difference?
In 2006 I pulled the rear drums and installed a rear disc kit offered by Dr Diff. It consist of 10.7" Toyota vented rotors, Ford Cobra calipers with a 1.75 bore and a custom mounting bracket.
At the time I was running a '509 cam in my 493 and the 5-6" of idle vacuum made slow speed stops difficult. I thought that a switch to manual brakes would be an improvement. I figured that the stopping power would be equal to or greater than the power setup ever was.
Wrong.
I tried 4 master cylinders with different bore sizes. The biggest was a 1 1/4". I also tried a 1" and 2 different 15/16" units. Every one of them gave pretty much the same results: FIRM pedal but terrible braking performance. It was actually unsafe to drive over 20 mph and I am not an over cautious guy. I brake tested each MC and only once was I able to get the tires to skid. I weigh 195 and I gave the pedal everything I had.
I was baffled as to why the car wouldn't stop. I tried using different proportioning valves. I tried drum brake units, disc brake units....Each time I drove the car I got the same thing. I asked around to see if anyone had any insight. I didn't get much help then even though there were some suggestions. Finally I did what I really hate: I admitted defeat and put the power booster back on.
I want to try again. With my history still clear in my mind, what other changes should I consider to make this work? The smallest MC I tried was a 15/16" one. I tried both drum/drum combo valves and disc/drum prop valve. Neither were modified. Yesterday I read that Dr Diff suggests to use a gutted drum/drum brake combination valve. Could this have made the difference?