Apparently these underwent an upgrade in mid-72 that was supposed to help with reliability. Were that many of the 71-72 Bendix boosters failing? What did they change in them to make them more reliable? Thanks!
Good question. Next question is; what are rebuilt boosters upgraded to or are they?Apparently these underwent an upgrade in mid-72 that was supposed to help with reliability. Were that many of the 71-72 Bendix boosters failing? What did they change in them to make them more reliable? Thanks!
Classic Cougar says on their website that they rebuild all to the better 73 specs. But it does not say what that actually means.Good question. Next question is; what are rebuilt boosters upgraded to or are they?
I have a Cardone (Car Done as Don C says) and although it tests and hold vacuum as it should, it is not THAT much better than when I ran the front 4 piston disc brakes without a booster.
And, having bad brakes could mean you won't get to spend it all before you depart.while mine is working fine if I was to replace the master I would just do it all. In fact when my car goes into a shop in a few months I am having all the brake lines replaced and I very well might go for a new mc and booster as well. Mine are working but look 49 years old and you can't take your money with you!!
That's a useful link. Cardone never seem to have any these days.If I do send it off, it's going here, but it will suck to be without it for 4-6 weeks. https://harmonclassicbrakes.com/contact/
https://www.parts123.com/parts123/yb.dll?parta~dyndetail~Z5Z5Z50001029z~Z5Z5Z5AADKP~P255.95~~~~S62C0Q8AHM68107116580g~Z5Z5Z5~Z5Z5Z50001029z
it can. but if your booster is still holding vacuum then it is fine.So the reason I'm asking is because my master cylinder is leaking terribly, and has been since I've owned the car. I was under the assumption that the fluid will get inside the booster and kill it. Inevitably most of these 48+ year old cars have had to have had the master cylinders leak in this manner at some point in their lives. Yet no one in this thread has had a known issue, and my 73 booster also still holds vacuum. I was going to have the booster rebuilt or replaced when swapping the master cylinder. But now I'm wondering if I shouldn't just spare the expense and clean it up really well and re-paint it and run it.
Great advice. Thanks!!That's the reason why I bench tested my original booster with a vaccum device - you can read the procedure on page 10 and 11 on my resto thread ('Tim's 1973 Mach 1 rebuild thread'). As I then knew my booster was holding vacumm steadily at the minimum of 10 minutes I chose to use it as is and give it some cosmetic resto. That included an order of a kit from harmonicclassicbrakes.com and a paint strip wih new nice semi gloss black. With this kit I renewed the front seal, front vaccum line seal and check valve, the rear bellow and felts and was done. For 25 bucks. So I would first recommend to test you booster before sending your original unit elsewhere...
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