A very nicely timed question Flatbedford.........that is what this post is going to begin to cover. I only have a few days here to get the project so far up to date so thanks for the gentle nudge.
It was apparent from the first test drive that the brakes were in sad shape on this thing. The brake pedal seemed to take an unusual amount of pressure on the pedal to achieve any type of slowing. Never mind the fact that any time you touched the brakes the truck tended to dive into the direction of oncoming traffic and tended to pull the other direction under non braking conditions. To my mind that and the seeming rough idle of the engine indicated a bad vacum booster. To that end.....the very first brake parts I purchased were a booster........a new master cylinder......and a new rubber vacum line.
Heres a pic of them installed.......
Well......that didnt fix the problem or create any signifigant change in the braking system......so it was time to dig deeper. At this point I also added some new rubber pads to both the brake and clutch pedal just to improve the feel of the pedals and to improve the looks of the cabin.
I had noticed while I was driving the truck that there was an ominous grinding noise coming from the left rear wheel when stopping. I took a look underneath and found that the left parking brake cable seemed to be frozen in a position that constanly applied the brakes.......so I turned there as my next most likely source of trouble and here is what I found........
As I suspected the frozen cable had caused some damage.It took a couple of days worth of lubricants and effort to free the cable from the housing. As you can see the wheel cylinder is shot and the brake shoes. The drum was also toast. So what I did was clean everything up at first. I freed the cable. I replaced the drum with a new one. Replaced the wheel cylinder. Replaced the shoes. Replaced the spring kit. Replaced the self adjusting kit. Cleaned and inspected the bearings. Replaced the inner wheel seal. Replaced the axle flange gasket seal.and used what paint I could scrounge to pretty it up a bit. I also replaced all the lug studs and nuts.
That appeared to have one wheel finished..but the pedal still wasnt normal so I moved on and did the exact same thing to the other rear wheel except that I was able to salvage the drum on that side at a cost savings of some 65.00.....a new drum ran me 80.00 and it only cost 15.00 to have one turned.
next I tackled the fronts........and got some education. More to come
Find 'em....Buy 'em....Fix 'em.....Drive 'em....Love 'em
HHC 4/67AR.... Bandits.....88-92
Presently in the stable
1969 Ford F-350 DRW
1989 Chevy S-10 Tahoe ( It gets me to work and back and fetches parts and groceries)
1981 Buick Regal ( My deceased uncles last project/driver....renamed project Regal Eagle to be finished in his honor)
1990 Ford F-150 ( Miss Yvonnes Daily Driver )
My F-350 project
http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 22&t=41744