ntsqd
heratic car camper
Something that I suspect that is frequently not understood about hydraulics is that everything is scalable. If you increase the caliper piston area by 15%, and then increase the m/c piston area by 15% you've swapped around a bunch of parts for no gain. Even among folks who work with hydraulics somehow think that brakes behave differently. They do not.
What matters is the hydraulic leverage ratio. M/C piston area divided into the caliper piston area. To increase that leverage the m/c bore needs to become smaller (seems to be rarely done) or the caliper pistons need to become bigger (much more common).
Changing from a Ø1-1/8" bore m/c with the OE Ford Ø2-7/8" calipers to a Ø1-1/32" bore m/c will give almost exactly the same results as keeping the Ø1-1/8" bore m/c and changing to the T-Bird calipers. (Where you'd find a Ø1-1/32" bore m/c I have no idea, but that's not the point.)
Excessive pad knock-back is the cause of a low pedal in an otherwise 'normal' set-up. Figure about .015" take-up per brake pad, so roughly .06" times the piston area is the take-up volume required. I just looked at m/c piston stroke vs. this take-up volume for the three common calipers (GM, Ford, & T-Bird) vs. Ø1.00 m/c, Ø1.125 m/c, & Ø1.250 m/c. Only the Ø1.00 used with the two largest piston calipers uses more than 0.5" of m/c piston stroke. If you're running out of m/c piston stroke before the brakes become effective it is not the fault of the m/c bore size. Something else is wrong.
Everything that I've read about H-B units cautions against pushing on the brake pedal while the engine is running without a m/c in place. You will, apparently, forcibly disassemble the H-B unit.
What matters is the hydraulic leverage ratio. M/C piston area divided into the caliper piston area. To increase that leverage the m/c bore needs to become smaller (seems to be rarely done) or the caliper pistons need to become bigger (much more common).
Changing from a Ø1-1/8" bore m/c with the OE Ford Ø2-7/8" calipers to a Ø1-1/32" bore m/c will give almost exactly the same results as keeping the Ø1-1/8" bore m/c and changing to the T-Bird calipers. (Where you'd find a Ø1-1/32" bore m/c I have no idea, but that's not the point.)
Excessive pad knock-back is the cause of a low pedal in an otherwise 'normal' set-up. Figure about .015" take-up per brake pad, so roughly .06" times the piston area is the take-up volume required. I just looked at m/c piston stroke vs. this take-up volume for the three common calipers (GM, Ford, & T-Bird) vs. Ø1.00 m/c, Ø1.125 m/c, & Ø1.250 m/c. Only the Ø1.00 used with the two largest piston calipers uses more than 0.5" of m/c piston stroke. If you're running out of m/c piston stroke before the brakes become effective it is not the fault of the m/c bore size. Something else is wrong.
Everything that I've read about H-B units cautions against pushing on the brake pedal while the engine is running without a m/c in place. You will, apparently, forcibly disassemble the H-B unit.