Larry, Wow...nice photo clip! OK here is what I have learned...As many of you know I have been involved in a somewhat similar issue. My pedal would go almost to the floor (still had brakes) 1st time, then 2nd time if done fairly soon about 1/2 way down and plenty of brakes. After lots of bleeding etc. no help. As a side issue I took the car to Fox/Fox a very experienced shop for alignment. I told the guy to be careful as the brakes go down on the 1st attempt, but it was OK to stop the car. He did the alignment (toe in was out 1/4 inch) then when he returned the car said my brake issue is not hydraulic but rear brakes and/or EM brake issues. I got home and really took a look at how it works. I discovered that the EM brake setting is the home position of the rear shoes on the cylinder end and the brake adj. is the home for the other end. The position of the rear EM brake determines how far the piston has to travel to get the shoe against the drum. The EM brake mech are spring loaded to pull the EM brake levers back from the drum. IF the EM brake is way too loose the home position makes the piston/shoe way back from the drum and the amount of movement for the shoe to contact the drum is a LOT more than it should be. After discovering this (I know many of you know this already) I decided to put a small C clamps on each wheel cylinder and test the brakes (Since you can't see inside the drum to watch). Wah-Lah the pedal did not go way down any more. I discovered while doing all this the PO put small bolts in the places the 1/4 " clevis's go ...so I ordered new ones. I also discovered the PO had installed the lower shoes backwards. I re-did the shoes, clevises and adj the EM brake for 5 clicks to lock, re-adj the rear brakes last...then found the excessive pedal movement was gone. My pedal goes down about 3 " 1st and 2nd times now. I also found the PO had put in a 5/8 instead of 7/8 MC, so my travel is more than it should be (I have a 7/8 now to install). I don't know if the front drum brakes would be suseptable to extra slop due to linings too thin, or cylinders made wrong ect....but I have leaned to eliminate mech. issues just put a C clamp on and see what the hydraulic's do then. So if you put on 6 C clamps on a BN-4 and the pedal is fine...the issue has to be MC or air (assuming hoses are OK). Also, I have a set of new wheel cylinders in my hand and I don't like something about them. When I did my MGA...they had little rubber bands on them to keep the pistons in...these do not AND the pistons stay in...WHERE is the spring that pushes the piston out to be sure it seats on the shoe??? (my MGA cylinders DO have a spring) I wander if all those wheel cylinders you have on your car are not made right? IF they were like this one the piston would retract back in spite of the rear brake EM setting or other brake adjustments?? Maybe the pistons stay out once fluid is in there...but I'm used to a spring being in there.Food for thought, Lee
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