R8rPhan
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Feb 5, 2017
- Posts
- 452
- Reaction score
- 42
- Location
- California
- First Name
- Mark
- Truck Year
- 1973 (1979?)
- Truck Model
- C10 long bed (Frankenstein truck)
- Engine Size
- 307
So, I've been driving around with a leaky master cylinder for 2 years since I bought and resurrected this old square body...
I grabbed a power brake booster and master cylinder off a junked 88 suburban/tahoe about the same time I got this truck and it's been sitting in a bucket all this time out on the front porch...
Today, since I've been snowed in for a couple weeks and can't go anywhere anyway and finally got a relatively dry day, I decided to do the conversion to power brakes.. The bolt pattern on the cab was for power brakes but someone had jury rigged in a master cylinder from something else..
Other than having to drill out the brake pedal pin hole on the end of the master cylinder push rod, the thing bolted right in...
So two issues..
First of all, I didn't have all the nuts for mounting the thing.. The two nuts that were on the existing master cylinder required a 15mm socket, and they were threaded on two bolts that were stuck from the inside, through the pedal bracket, the firewall and the master cylinder flange, with a nut on them on the engine side..
So, I put a 3/8" bolt and nut to replace one of those, used the other one where I found it, and took the remaining nut and threaded it on one of the four remaining posts..
So I need more nuts... But what size are they.. According to every bolt chart I find on line, there is no bolt that requires a 15mm socket.. But require it they do..
Anyone know what size nuts I need for the master cylinder mounting studs? I tried threading a 3/8" nut on them, and they started (less than a turn) but that's it.. So I'm thinking they are definitely metric sized studs...
Second issue, after mounting the booster and master cylinder, I filled the cups with brake fluid and started pumping the brakes to flush the thing out.. But only the rear ports spewed fluid.. The front port/reservoir.. nada..
So I took a paper clip and shoved it in the outlet from the master cylinder and as far into the drain inside the front reservoir as the paper clip could reach and pumped some more.. nada.. Did this several times and nada.. however, I noticed the last time, some tiny bubbles came up inside the reservoir..
I suspect that there's a check valve in there that is stuck from sitting dry for two years.. Any advice on getting the thing to free up and start pumping? I'm hoping that just sitting with fluid in it for a couple days while I finish the other stuff I plan to do will lubricate and free up everything inside, but if it doesn't is there anything else I can do?
Rear brakes pump up and hold pressure and are ready to bleed..
I was thinking of trying to blow compressed air back in through the outlet port, but I don't know what size fitting I need to get to pull that off...
The master cylinder 'should' be good, but sitting for two years in a moist environment probably wasn't the greatest thing for it... Still have to run vacuum to the drum, and have a new check valve for that, but I don't expect issues there...
If I have to buy a new master cylinder, are they all pretty much interchangeable for that year? The junker is long gone so I can't get any more info on it than it was an 88 burb/tahoe...
Ideas?
I grabbed a power brake booster and master cylinder off a junked 88 suburban/tahoe about the same time I got this truck and it's been sitting in a bucket all this time out on the front porch...
Today, since I've been snowed in for a couple weeks and can't go anywhere anyway and finally got a relatively dry day, I decided to do the conversion to power brakes.. The bolt pattern on the cab was for power brakes but someone had jury rigged in a master cylinder from something else..
Other than having to drill out the brake pedal pin hole on the end of the master cylinder push rod, the thing bolted right in...
So two issues..
First of all, I didn't have all the nuts for mounting the thing.. The two nuts that were on the existing master cylinder required a 15mm socket, and they were threaded on two bolts that were stuck from the inside, through the pedal bracket, the firewall and the master cylinder flange, with a nut on them on the engine side..
So, I put a 3/8" bolt and nut to replace one of those, used the other one where I found it, and took the remaining nut and threaded it on one of the four remaining posts..
So I need more nuts... But what size are they.. According to every bolt chart I find on line, there is no bolt that requires a 15mm socket.. But require it they do..
Anyone know what size nuts I need for the master cylinder mounting studs? I tried threading a 3/8" nut on them, and they started (less than a turn) but that's it.. So I'm thinking they are definitely metric sized studs...
Second issue, after mounting the booster and master cylinder, I filled the cups with brake fluid and started pumping the brakes to flush the thing out.. But only the rear ports spewed fluid.. The front port/reservoir.. nada..
So I took a paper clip and shoved it in the outlet from the master cylinder and as far into the drain inside the front reservoir as the paper clip could reach and pumped some more.. nada.. Did this several times and nada.. however, I noticed the last time, some tiny bubbles came up inside the reservoir..
I suspect that there's a check valve in there that is stuck from sitting dry for two years.. Any advice on getting the thing to free up and start pumping? I'm hoping that just sitting with fluid in it for a couple days while I finish the other stuff I plan to do will lubricate and free up everything inside, but if it doesn't is there anything else I can do?
Rear brakes pump up and hold pressure and are ready to bleed..
I was thinking of trying to blow compressed air back in through the outlet port, but I don't know what size fitting I need to get to pull that off...
The master cylinder 'should' be good, but sitting for two years in a moist environment probably wasn't the greatest thing for it... Still have to run vacuum to the drum, and have a new check valve for that, but I don't expect issues there...
If I have to buy a new master cylinder, are they all pretty much interchangeable for that year? The junker is long gone so I can't get any more info on it than it was an 88 burb/tahoe...
Ideas?
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