Spitfire & GT6 Forum
brake master cylinder
Posted by Andy-Sherry
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Portland, OR, USA
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Topic Creator (OP)
Mar 27, 2011 11:45 AM
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I was looking on e bay and there is a master cylinder thats for a 1975 to 1980 spitfire,what is the difference between
that and 1 for 1970-1974.Our two spitfires a 74 and a 77 the master cylinder on both look identical.Just had another look the 77 seems a bit smaller?
Regards Andy&Sherry
that and 1 for 1970-1974.Our two spitfires a 74 and a 77 the master cylinder on both look identical.Just had another look the 77 seems a bit smaller?
Regards Andy&Sherry
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Mar 27, 2011 11:50 AM
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hunttriumph1500
Stephen Hunt
East Hampton, CT, USA
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1967 Triumph Spitfire MkIII "Oldest Spitfire Owned"
1968 Triumph GT6 MkI "First Triumph!" 1971 Triumph Spitfire MkIV "Parts Car" 1971 Triumph Spitfire MkIV "Junk Yard Dog" & more |
Mar 28, 2011 09:55 AM
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The difference between brake master cylinders is:
70? -75 large cap dual reservoir North America/USA
76-80 small cap dual reservoir North America/USA
Most everywhere else had a single reservoir, in other words the reservoir served both the front and back brakes without a seperation divider inside.
The North America version had a wall inside the master cylinder so that if the front brakes leaked out the rear would still have fluid, that is why they also have the PDWA switch.
Quote:
"I think the threads are different. The 74 has imperial and the 75 and beyond has metric."
The threads were not different between my 1974 spit and my 1975 spit, they used the exact same Master Cylinder.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2011-03-28 10:31 AM by hunttriumph1500.
70? -75 large cap dual reservoir North America/USA
76-80 small cap dual reservoir North America/USA
Most everywhere else had a single reservoir, in other words the reservoir served both the front and back brakes without a seperation divider inside.
The North America version had a wall inside the master cylinder so that if the front brakes leaked out the rear would still have fluid, that is why they also have the PDWA switch.
Quote:
"I think the threads are different. The 74 has imperial and the 75 and beyond has metric."
The threads were not different between my 1974 spit and my 1975 spit, they used the exact same Master Cylinder.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2011-03-28 10:31 AM by hunttriumph1500.
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Mar 28, 2011 10:11 AM
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racer490
Jerry Bryant
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Mar 28, 2011 12:17 PM
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Mar 28, 2011 12:31 PM
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Thanks Stephen and Mark, My bad.
I was looking at Rimmers site and apparently some but not all of the later
Master Cylinders had metric fittings. Maybe we should start a poll to find
out, so far none have metric. So I wonder, are the two styles interchangeable?
Can I take a master cylinder with a small cap and replace my large cap master
cylinder?
I was looking at Rimmers site and apparently some but not all of the later
Master Cylinders had metric fittings. Maybe we should start a poll to find
out, so far none have metric. So I wonder, are the two styles interchangeable?
Can I take a master cylinder with a small cap and replace my large cap master
cylinder?
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Mar 28, 2011 12:40 PM
Joined 26 years ago
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hunttriumph1500
Stephen Hunt
East Hampton, CT, USA
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1967 Triumph Spitfire MkIII "Oldest Spitfire Owned"
1968 Triumph GT6 MkI "First Triumph!" 1971 Triumph Spitfire MkIV "Parts Car" 1971 Triumph Spitfire MkIV "Junk Yard Dog" & more |
Mar 28, 2011 12:40 PM
Joined 16 years ago
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In reply to a post by trzavie
Thanks Stephen and Mark, My bad.
I was looking at Rimmers site and apparently some but not all of the later
Master Cylinders had metric fittings. Maybe we should start a poll to find
out, so far none have metric. So I wonder, are the two styles interchangeable?
Can I take a master cylinder with a small cap and replace my large cap master
cylinder?
I was looking at Rimmers site and apparently some but not all of the later
Master Cylinders had metric fittings. Maybe we should start a poll to find
out, so far none have metric. So I wonder, are the two styles interchangeable?
Can I take a master cylinder with a small cap and replace my large cap master
cylinder?
I have, I put a small cap in place of a large cap, but while the fittings were the same I had to make a small modification to the bulkhead/firewall for the small cap as it's housing was like an extra 3/4" to 1" longer than the large cap style or something to that effect.
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Mar 28, 2011 12:47 PM
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Thanks guys, you are the best. So Stephen, is it the plastic housing that hits?
If so could I take a new small cap master cylinder, remove the plastic fluid
housing and put on my old large cap housing? Would there be a clearance issue
then?
Al
If so could I take a new small cap master cylinder, remove the plastic fluid
housing and put on my old large cap housing? Would there be a clearance issue
then?
Al
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Mar 28, 2011 01:04 PM
Joined 26 years ago
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hunttriumph1500
Stephen Hunt
East Hampton, CT, USA
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1967 Triumph Spitfire MkIII "Oldest Spitfire Owned"
1968 Triumph GT6 MkI "First Triumph!" 1971 Triumph Spitfire MkIV "Parts Car" 1971 Triumph Spitfire MkIV "Junk Yard Dog" & more |
Mar 28, 2011 01:12 PM
Joined 16 years ago
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Mar 28, 2011 01:54 PM
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racer490
Jerry Bryant
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Mar 28, 2011 05:44 PM
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Portland, OR, USA
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Topic Creator (OP)
Mar 28, 2011 06:56 PM
Top Contributor
Joined 16 years ago
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