Bob_Spidell
Yoda

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You're welcome, Steve. Glad to be able to pass it along.
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I would expect this choice to be of interest to a limited group of Healey owners but are not a selection of general necessity/need. Am I correct in my thought?
Hi All,
OK, I appreciate that you are discussing the new calipers but no one has answered the question of what was the issues with the original 2 piston brakes with cintered metalic pads? Other then a conversion from drums, why would you change the front calipers to the 4 piston version in a car not used for racing? I would be more incline to install rear disks then change the original front calipers that I have found more then adequate for the past 54 years and only 1 rebuild. I use silicone brake fluid and have had very good performance.
I would expect this choice to be of interest to a limited group of Healey owners but are not a selection of general necessity/need. Am I correct in my thought?
Ray(64BJ8P1)
I had interference issues with my hard line at full lock. It took me three iterations to get mine correct. See: https://www.pbase.com/stevegerow/healey_discs
You might want to remove the spring and move the suspension up and down at full lock to make sure the hard line isn't hitting the shock tower.
Much easier using stainless flex hoses.
I have to chime in here. Going to a larger (bigger bore) master cylinder will not reduce pedal pressure.... it will do the opposite ..... it will increase your pedal pressure. This may seem counter-intuitive to some but it is true.
Hmm, now that caught my attention. My 'restorer' installed a 7/8" MC in my BT7 without a servo. I did not like the pedal effort nor the pedal travel so I installed a booster. That helped the effort a little, but the pedal travel is still longer than I like. Would going to the standard 5/8" MC reduce pedal travel? I do have the stock BT7 calipers.
Thanks.
II have to chime in here. Going to a larger (bigger bore) master cylinder will not reduce pedal pressure.... it will do the opposite ..... it will increase your pedal pressure. This may seem counter-intuitive to some but it is true.
Hmm, now that caught my attention. My 'restorer' installed a 7/8" MC in my BT7 without a servo. I did not like the pedal effort nor the pedal travel so I installed a booster. That helped the effort a little, but the pedal travel is still longer than I like. Would going to the standard 5/8" MC reduce pedal travel? I do have the stock BT7 calipers.
Thanks.
No, just the opposite. A smaller master bore size will increase pedal travel. You might check if you have an adjustable clevis that attaches to the brake pedal that could change your brake travel.
I
No, just the opposite. A smaller master bore size will increase pedal travel. You might check if you have an adjustable clevis that attaches to the brake pedal that could change your brake travel.
Yeah, i just did the contortionist routine and wound the yoke on the mc rod out about 3/8". Feels much better after a short drive, will see how it does on a longer trip through the mountains.
Did the BJ7 have the smaller, (allegedly) weaker axles?
The Moss ss lines and fittings work fine. You don't need to look at a tr 6 line.