finz68
Active Member
My 1965 Coronet has been converted from power brakes to manual with a dual reservoir MC. The car still has drum brakes front and rear. There is no proportioning valve installed. Should I have one?
Thank you. The reason I posted is my driver's side rear drum heats up to 170 degrees compared to 70-80 on the passenger side after a 30 minute drive. I had the wheel/braking assembly and bearing checked with 2 different mechanics and they found nothing.No 4 wheel drum brake arrangement that I know of (Mopar) uses a proportioning valve. They did have a junction block for joining all the lines in a common area but that is called a distribution block.
The reason that actual proportioning valves were needed was because the differences in how disc brakes act in a linear manner while self-energizing drums have an exponential braking effect. For example, 50 lbs of pedal pressure may deliver 100 lbs of drum brake force, 100 lbs of pedal pressure may result in 300 lbs of brake force, 150 lbs of pedal pressure may result in 450 lbs of brake force. The two differing rates required the front and rear to have some form of steady balance.
A 4 wheel drum or 4 wheel disc system on OEM applications are designed with what is known as natural proportioning where the wheel cylinders or caliper sizes are chosen to deliver proper brake bias with no additional controls. The goal on 4 wheel discs is a 2 to 1 ratio where the front maintains twice the load of the rear. 66% versus 33% is one number that has been tossed around. Drum brakes? I'd assume about the same but I'm not certain. I am certain that the fronts do assume the greater concentration of force in a street car. Drag cars are different due to the radically different tire sizes...slicks versus pizza cutters....