Another Generation
New Member
The quick question...... Does this look like a factory brake pedal assembly for a 1966 Fury?
The long story .....
I used to run A bodies but not that I have teenage children I wanted something big enough for all four of us. So I bought this 1966 ragtop fury. When I bought it the previous owner told me that a 'custom shop' had done a disc brake conversion and that 'the brakes had never really been right' since that time. I figured I've done brakes before.... how hard can it be?? Worst case scenario I buy a Wildwood conversion and replace whatever they had done.
Well I've spent quite a while trying to get them working properly. The pedal goes about 2/3 of the way to floor and is hard as a rock. However, the car just gradually slows to a stop. The kit was a 'Right Stuff' kit and I've replaced the master cylinder, the combination valve, and the power brake booster. No change. I checked today and when the pedal is depressed the front cylinder moves about 10ml of fluid which seems OK to me. I was reading the documentation on the Wildwood website and discovered that they recommend between a 4:1 and a 5:1 pedal ratio. That got me thinking and I pulled the pedal assembly to take a look. The 'custom shop' apparently drilled a new hole in the brake pedal lever to connect to the power brake booster. The measurement from the pivot point to the master cylinder connection is about 6.5" while the overall pedal length is around 17". That only gives me a 2.6 ratio. Therefore, my current thinking is that I just don't have enough brake pressure.
So...... my initial question is if that is the factory brake pedal assembly then how did it ever work? The original connection point might be 1/2" closer to the picot point which would get me to something like 2.7 but that still seems very low. I'm not sure whether the car had power brakes originally or not, but manual brakes require an even larger ratio. Am I missing something here? Does someone make a brake pedal assembly with a better ratio? I can probably fab something up, but it seems odd to me that it would have worked with the original drums and be so far off with the disc brake conversion.
The long story .....
I used to run A bodies but not that I have teenage children I wanted something big enough for all four of us. So I bought this 1966 ragtop fury. When I bought it the previous owner told me that a 'custom shop' had done a disc brake conversion and that 'the brakes had never really been right' since that time. I figured I've done brakes before.... how hard can it be?? Worst case scenario I buy a Wildwood conversion and replace whatever they had done.
Well I've spent quite a while trying to get them working properly. The pedal goes about 2/3 of the way to floor and is hard as a rock. However, the car just gradually slows to a stop. The kit was a 'Right Stuff' kit and I've replaced the master cylinder, the combination valve, and the power brake booster. No change. I checked today and when the pedal is depressed the front cylinder moves about 10ml of fluid which seems OK to me. I was reading the documentation on the Wildwood website and discovered that they recommend between a 4:1 and a 5:1 pedal ratio. That got me thinking and I pulled the pedal assembly to take a look. The 'custom shop' apparently drilled a new hole in the brake pedal lever to connect to the power brake booster. The measurement from the pivot point to the master cylinder connection is about 6.5" while the overall pedal length is around 17". That only gives me a 2.6 ratio. Therefore, my current thinking is that I just don't have enough brake pressure.
So...... my initial question is if that is the factory brake pedal assembly then how did it ever work? The original connection point might be 1/2" closer to the picot point which would get me to something like 2.7 but that still seems very low. I'm not sure whether the car had power brakes originally or not, but manual brakes require an even larger ratio. Am I missing something here? Does someone make a brake pedal assembly with a better ratio? I can probably fab something up, but it seems odd to me that it would have worked with the original drums and be so far off with the disc brake conversion.