darth_linux
Senior Member
Nope. I figured it wouldn’t get changed either.Curious....i would have thought that the adjustment had never been changed in the first place. Were you messing with that adjustment before the booster was sent out??
Nope. I figured it wouldn’t get changed either.Curious....i would have thought that the adjustment had never been changed in the first place. Were you messing with that adjustment before the booster was sent out??
Did this also fix your pedal not returning all the way also?RESOLVED!
So, dumb old me assumed that the booster pushrod hadn't been changed during the rebuild. A "quick eyeball" of the pushrod length before I installed the MC was "that looks close enough."
It was not.
The pushrod was way too short. I tried following @Ross Wooldridge 's advice to get a 1/16" gap between the booster and MC but that wasn't really working right. I got the rod way too long and full engagement of the brakes was almost instant (opposite from the problem I was having.)
As I was adjusting the pushrod, I came upon a portion of the threads that were rusty. Obviously, the rust showed where the pushrod was either exposed to the elements or not. I adjusted the pushrod right to the edge of the rusty threads and voila, the brakes performed just like they used to (only without the hissing from the bad booster).
Sometimes it's something like a witness mark or rust line that gives you the insight you need to put things back to "the way they were."
Cheers to all for your input, suggestions, and advice.
Yes it didDid this also fix your pedal not returning all the way also?
....
Something else I find interesting and in need of explaining - why inside a dual-chamber MBC the piston is not solid? That when the front piston moves, the rear piston also moves because it's one solid object. Why is there a spring between the first and second pistons? You are delaying rear brake action when you have that, and I thought it was important that the rear brakes engage not just at the same time as the fronts, but even a little before.
I get contradictory information from the AI search bots when asking questions about the operation or design goals of front and rear brakes.
One answer was this:
"Cars are designed to activate front brakes first and apply more force to them because weight transfers to the front during braking, increasing their grip and stopping power.
Rear brakes activate after the front brakes to supplement stopping power and prevent nose-diving by distributing braking force dynamically"
When my prompt was this: "explain rear drum brake hold-off valve" the answer was:
"A rear drum brake hold-off (or metering) valve delays the application of front disc brakes in a disc/drum system to ensure the rear drum brakes engage first, preventing the vehicle from "nose-diving". It holds off the initial line pressure, allowing rear shoes to overcome spring tension and make contact with the drums, and then releases the pressure to the front discs, balancing the braking system. This valve is a crucial component of the combination valve in vehicles with front disc and rear drum brakes."
There's some confusion here. If you don't want the front end to nose-dive, then you certainly can't delay the action of the rear brakes vs the front brakes. Yes? Maybe you even want the rear brakes to activate first ?
Was / is nose-diving a problem in 4-wheel drum cars?
My understanding of the evolution of the brake system from 1967 (4-wheel drums) to 1972 (front disk / rear drums) is that with the first appearance of front disks, a hold-off valve was added TO THE REAR LINE AFTER THE DISTRIBUTION BLOCK as a separate device, the purpose being to throttle (to hold-off) the pressure to the rear drums when the pressure exceeded 250 PSI. If main pressure was 500 PSI, the rears would eventually get 500 but at some controlled rate, they wouldn't get 500 as fast as the fronts got it.
Well, they DID start making them with different volumes as disc brakes became standard. My trusty Bendix dual pot is still fairly even, but even it has a little front volumetric bias, for an ALL DRUM system. The basic fact remains, most of the mass is up front, hence, the momentum, which is linear and conservative.This rear hold-off valve was incorporated maybe in 1969 into the distribution block. The proportioning valve for the front disks came next, it was added a year or so later, when the distribution block became cast-iron instead of brass.
Unless I'm getting this mixed up, and the proportioning valve replaced the hold-off valve and hence like the hold-off valve it also only operates on the rear drums, but it operates differently than the hold-off valve, in which case this needs explaining.
AND EXPLAIN THIS:
Why didn't the master brake cylinder have 2 different size pistons !!! One for the front, one for the rear. That would automatically give a solution for generating different forces for the front disks and rear drums. No need for a complicated distribution block.
I still want to know why there are springs between the first and second pistons in the MBC. Should be a solid shaft. God knows what effect the spring has on rear brake pressure and activation pattern. What I they thinking here?
From what I understand about these brake systems, the distribution block used in Drum / Drum brakes might delay the line pressure a bit but its main job was to not lock the rear brakes before the front brakes locked up. The difference between the distribution block and the Proportioning valve is that Disc brakes require about twice the PSI as do drums. That is why the manufacturers came up with the dual diaphragm booster to double the pressure to the front discs. They also needed the Proportioning valve which reduced the pressure to the rear brakes down to about half of the pressure.I get contradictory information from the AI search bots when asking questions about the operation or design goals of front and rear brakes.
One answer was this:
"Cars are designed to activate front brakes first and apply more force to them because weight transfers to the front during braking, increasing their grip and stopping power. Rear brakes activate after the front brakes to supplement stopping power and prevent nose-diving by distributing braking force dynamically"
When my prompt was this: "explain rear drum brake hold-off valve" the answer was:
"A rear drum brake hold-off (or metering) valve delays the application of front disc brakes in a disc/drum system to ensure the rear drum brakes engage first, preventing the vehicle from "nose-diving". It holds off the initial line pressure, allowing rear shoes to overcome spring tension and make contact with the drums, and then releases the pressure to the front discs, balancing the braking system. This valve is a crucial component of the combination valve in vehicles with front disc and rear drum brakes."
There's some confusion here. If you don't want the front end to nose-dive, then you certainly can't delay the action of the rear brakes vs the front brakes. Yes? Maybe you even want the rear brakes to activate first ?
Was / is nose-diving a problem in 4-wheel drum cars?
My understanding of the evolution of the brake system from 1967 (4-wheel drums) to 1972 (front disk / rear drums) is that with the first appearance of front disks, a hold-off valve was added TO THE REAR LINE AFTER THE DISTRIBUTION BLOCK as a separate device, the purpose being to throttle (to hold-off) the pressure to the rear drums when the pressure exceeded 250 PSI. If main pressure was 500 PSI, the rears would eventually get 500 but at some controlled rate, they wouldn't get 500 as fast as the fronts got it.
This rear hold-off valve was incorporated maybe in 1969 into the distribution block. The proportioning valve for the front disks came next, it was added a year or so later, when the distribution block became cast-iron instead of brass.
Unless I'm getting this mixed up, and the proportioning valve replaced the hold-off valve and hence like the hold-off valve it also only operates on the rear drums, but it operates differently than the hold-off valve, in which case this needs explaining.
AND EXPLAIN THIS:
Why didn't the master brake cylinder have 2 different size pistons !!! One for the front, one for the rear. That would automatically give a solution for generating different forces for the front disks and rear drums. No need for a complicated distribution block.
I still want to know why there are springs between the first and second pistons in the MBC. Should be a solid shaft. God knows what effect the spring has on rear brake pressure and activation pattern. What were they thinking here?
Simple hydraulics. You have to balance the two systems.I still want to know why there are springs between the first and second pistons in the MBC. Should be a solid shaft. God knows what effect the spring has on rear brake pressure and activation pattern. What were they thinking here?
They actually are in parallel. Again, it would be easier to explain with paper and pencil, but they are two separate systems.But you're drawing those circuits in parallel. The pistons are in series.
Simple hydraulics. You have to balance the two systems.
It would be easier to explain this with paper and pencil, but let's try.
First..... Just look at this as two hydraulic systems and forget this is about brakes. That will remove thoughts about applying rear brakes first or other noise. Then let's also say these are identical systems to remove even more thoughts about brakes.
So.. We've got two identical systems with independent slave cylinders being pushed by two master cylinders, one in the front and one in the rear. There's a twist and they use one actuator (your foot against the pedal). If I was setting something like this up, I would use something to balance the force from applied by your foot to the master cylinders. This is done to compensate for differences in each system, like volume of fluid, spring pressure, friction, wear, etc.
The simple way would be to set up a bar that pivots like this with the two master cylinders on each end of the "see-saw" and your foot pressure in the center.
Since that's not the way that Chrysler et al decided to do that, they added a spring between the two master cylinders instead. So, think of the spring as the center pivoting bar in the above see-saws. Let's say you are applying 100lbs to the pedal and the systems are like the left pic where the pressure is split easily. The spring in the master doesn't come into play like the see-saw is horizontal. Now let's say one system needs to push 25lbs and the other needs to push 75lbs. You have the pic on the right compensating for the difference. The spring in the master allows one piston to move more to compensate.
I've simplified this a bit, but remember that you are dealing with different size shoes or in the case of disc brakes, different size pistons so that more force is applied to the discs. In an ideal world, the front and rear systems would be matched by sizing the piston so the force and volume needed would match. It's not an ideal world though and you need to have something that allows for variance.
Pain meds are kicking in, so I'll stop explaining what I learned sitting in night school hydraulics class so many years before the internet and AI.
Speaking of AI.... Stop... Just stop.
The spring isn't going to delay anything. It will only start to compress once its rated pressure is exceeded.You will for sure get nose-diving when the spring delays rear brake activation.
From what I understand about these brake systems, the distribution block used in Drum / Drum brakes might delay the line pressure a bit but its main job was to not lock the rear brakes before the front brakes locked up. The difference between the distribution block and the Proportioning valve is that Disc brakes require about twice the PSI as do drums. That is why the manufacturers came up with the dual diaphragm booster to double the pressure to the front discs. They also needed the Proportioning valve which reduced the pressure to the rear brakes down to about half of the pressure.
You aren't specifying what force the spring starts to compress. Again, go back to the analogy of pen spring versus dump truck spring.A force of 100 psi is applied to a piston with area 1 square inch, which is connected by a spring to a second piston of area 1 square inch. What is the force experienced by the second piston?
View attachment 733727
A force of 100 psi is applied to a piston with area 1 square inch, which is connected by a spring to a second piston of area 1 square inch. Does the spring delay the application of force experienced by the second piston?
Force Transmission and Delay
Yes, the spring delays the application of force experienced by the second piston.
(explanation of spring compression, extension, time equilibrium)
You aren't specifying what force the spring starts to compress. Again, go back to the analogy of pen spring versus dump truck spring.
To take it another step, the pistons compress, the brake pedal bends etc. Is it enough to have any effect? There's clearance in every pivot point that needs to be taken up. Does it mean anything?Any force will compress (to some extent) any spring. Even if I say that the first piston is connected to the second piston by a very weak spring, the answer is the same.
You draw your diagrams as if they are electrical circuits, with current flow, resistance, and voltage drops. That's not how this particular hydraulic circuit works, there is no flow, it's basically static.