TRExp

Spitfire & GT6 Forum

Is this brake master cylinder worth refurbishing?

. Become a Supporting Member to hide the ad above & support a small business
AutoShrine Sponsor
AutoShrine Sponsor
AutoShrine Sponsor
AutoShrine Sponsor
AutoShrine Sponsor
rkt739 Avatar
rkt739 Luke Bretscher
Elgin, IL, USA   USA
Sign in to contact
I've just removed this master cylinder from the pedal assembly and had a look at it. (The car hasn't been operable for years or possibly decades.) The innards look alright from the perspective of the valve on top, but the pushrod end of the piston is awfully rusty. The last two pictures show the piston end before and after I gave it a few whacks to shift it a few mm into its cylinder. So it's not technically frozen anymore, but it's certainly not going to fall out with a good shake. What do you think? Is it a lost cause, and if not, what's next?


Attachments:
2020-08-17 17.44.02.jpg    38.8 KB
2020-08-17 17.44.02.jpg

2020-08-17 17.44.07.jpg    42.9 KB
Sign In or Register to view this photo
2020-08-17 17.49.22.jpg    42.5 KB
Sign In or Register to view this photo
2020-08-17 17.49.17.jpg    32.7 KB
Sign In or Register to view this photo
2020-08-17 17.50.40.jpg    36.4 KB
Sign In or Register to view this photo
Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
. Become a Supporting Member to hide the ad above & support a small business
spitfire50 Avatar
spitfire50 Paul Mugford
Rochester, N.H., USA   USA
Sign in to contact
Luke,
I think there are better ways of going. That one is going to need quite a bit of work even if you don't find pits in the bore.
If you have some reason to want that particular master cylinder you may wind up using Apple Hydraulics or White Post Restorations to sleeve the bore and save it.
All the best,
Paul



TRF# 10423

Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
saleon Silver Member A J
Everett, WA, USA   USA
Sign in to contact
Only you can decide that for yourself.

I bought the cheapo brake master from BPNW for $140, and learned after the fact that people have had trouble with it. Mine seems to have "dead" stroke in it before it starts to push fluid.
Will be using it as a stopgap till I get a proper one, as for which one, I was put on to the TRW/Lucas which Spitbits sells for $200, or sleeving my original.
White Post and Apple Hydraulics will rebuild sleeve and rebore the original for ~$30 or so more than the cost of the TRW. To me it made more sense to spend the extra money on this service, as at least I wont have to worry about the bore corroding in the future, so I sent it to White Post. I"ll be sending the clutch as well.
You can send them the pictures of your unit and ask them if they think it's worth saving, that's what I did, they confirmed my parts were original so i wanted to save them

AJ



1969 Triumph GT6+, J-type OD

Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
unclewolverine Aaron Gray
WATHENA, KS, USA   USA
Sign in to contact
I've saved worse but I was really surprised that it worked. I just tried it because I couldn't afford to do anything else. I was going to start a new thread somewhat along these lines soon though, my 66 spit had its mc cannibalized and is gone; has anyone tried fitting universal/race type master cylinders for the the clutch and brakes? I know its been a few years since I've looked into anything like this but surely they are cheaper and built to better tolerances.

Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
. Become a Supporting Member to hide the ad above & support a small business
Tonyfixit Avatar
Tonyfixit Tony M
Duncan, BC, Canada   CAN
Sign in to contact
20 something years ago I had M/C problems. Even then there had been issues with aftermarket replacements, so I decided go with getting my M/C sleeved by Apple.

The work appeared to be very well done, but the M/C did leak when installed. Rather than ship it back to Apple (I live in Canada) I opted to rebuild it myself with an original Girling seal kit. I had originally used DoT 4 fluid, but as the leak had lifted the paint on my newly painted car, I opted to use DoT5 fluid this time around, as I had burned the warranty anyway.

This has worked perfectly ever since.

Since then, on friend's cars, I have seen both no name aftermarket M/C's leak as well as the TRW M/C's

I do feel that sleeving IS likely the best choice. BUT Apple only supplied the rebuilt M/C body. It did not have a new reservoir.
This was not an issue for me.

Just some things to consider.

Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
clshore Gold Member Carter Shore
Beverly Hills, FL, USA   USA
Sign in to contact
In reply to # 1730460 by unclewolverine I've saved worse but I was really surprised that it worked. I just tried it because I couldn't afford to do anything else. I was going to start a new thread somewhat along these lines soon though, my 66 spit had its mc cannibalized and is gone; has anyone tried fitting universal/race type master cylinders for the the clutch and brakes? I know its been a few years since I've looked into anything like this but surely they are cheaper and built to better tolerances.
The generic single MC from Wilwood, Tilton, etc will work just fine, same bolt pattern, etc.
I've had good luck with them.
But you also have an opportunity to fit a dual MC with adjustable brake balance bar, to replace the single brake MC.
I've put a lot of miles on the single MC cars in the last 50 years, had several brake issues, but luckily no crashes.
Would have been safer and better to have dual MC brakes.

Bigger motor usually means faster speeds. winking smiley

But your call.

Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
rkt739 Avatar
rkt739 Luke Bretscher
Elgin, IL, USA   USA
Sign in to contact
In reply to # 1730592 by clshore But you also have an opportunity to fit a dual MC with adjustable brake balance bar, to replace the single brake MC.
I've put a lot of miles on the single MC cars in the last 50 years, had several brake issues, but luckily no crashes.
Would have been safer and better to have dual MC brakes.

Would you elaborate on these dual MCs? Where one can get them, if installation is difficult, why they are better, etc. Thanks

Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
RobTAR Robert I
Seattle, WA, USA   USA
Sign in to contact
In reply to # 1730612 by rkt739
In reply to # 1730592 by clshore But you also have an opportunity to fit a dual MC with adjustable brake balance bar, to replace the single brake MC.
I've put a lot of miles on the single MC cars in the last 50 years, had several brake issues, but luckily no crashes.
Would have been safer and better to have dual MC brakes.

Would you elaborate on these dual MCs? Where one can get them, if installation is difficult, why they are better, etc. Thanks

It's running 2 single circuit MC instead of a single dual circuit MC. the difficulty part comes from fitting two where there was once one, and fabbing or fitting an adjustable balance bar to adjust brake bias. It CAN be better as it gives you finer control of the front and rear brake circuits for better bias adjustments, this is especially true for modified or different brakes. It can also be much more reliable as you can source newer MC with updated designs that are far more reliable than the old ones or the new crap they sell us from India.

If you design and fab your own setup it can be done very cheap with top quality OEM supplier parts (Aisin etc) from Rock Auto.

Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
unclewolverine Aaron Gray
WATHENA, KS, USA   USA
Sign in to contact
Not to mention safer. With the single line system a leak anywhere in the system makes you lose all brakes, double system you still have either front or rear brakes.

Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
rkt739 Avatar
rkt739 Luke Bretscher
Elgin, IL, USA   USA
Sign in to contact
In reply to # 1730630 by RobTAR If you design and fab your own setup it can be done very cheap with top quality OEM supplier parts (Aisin etc) from Rock Auto.

And what if I'm a complete amateur who has been making it up as he goes along for the last four years of restoration?

Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
Jediscuba Avatar
Jediscuba Steven Spandorf
Southampton, NY, USA   USA
Sign in to contact
Carter,
Having built mounts for twin cylinders which were tied by a balance bar, I know of what you speak but
many here have no idea what they look like for our vehicles or what would be involved with fabricating one.
I don't presently have that set up, other wise I would post a photo.
If you have a photo available, I think sharing it would be helpful for many here.

Even though Wilwood does have a few photos, none are directly applicable to ur set up
https://www.wilwood.com/Search/PartNoSearch?q=balance%20bar

This is about the [url=]best video[/url] I've seen but still does not show cylinders as they would be mounted on a Spit or GT6

Steve

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



[quote=clshore,1730427,1730592]
[quote=unclewolverine,1730427,1730460]
I've saved worse but I was really surprised that it worked. I just tried it because I couldn't afford to do anything else. I was going to start a new thread somewhat along these lines soon though, my 66 spit had its mc cannibalized and is gone; has anyone tried fitting universal/race type master cylinders for the the clutch and brakes? I know its been a few years since I've looked into anything like this but surely they are cheaper and built to better tolerances.
[/quote]
The generic single MC from Wilwood, Tilton, etc will work just fine, same bolt pattern, etc.
I've had good luck with them.
But you also have an opportunity to fit a dual MC with adjustable brake balance bar, to replace the single brake MC.
I've put a lot of miles on the single MC cars in the last 50 years, had several brake issues, but luckily no crashes.
Would have been safer and better to have dual MC brakes.

Bigger motor usually means faster speeds. winking smiley

But your call.
[/quote]

Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
14GPDJENGINEERING Avatar
Silver Spring, MD, USA   USA
Sign in to contact
Here is the design I stole from Rick Cline -- crude but it works. I sleeved two OE 5/8 master cylinders with some stainless steel tube I had.



Dennis smiling smiley
Robert is my father's brother -- so Bob's my uncle.
RIP WWII veteran Robert C. P. 11/09/1924 -- 02/14/2021


Attachments:
MasterCylinders.jpg    41.9 KB
MasterCylinders.jpg

Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
rkt739 Avatar
rkt739 Luke Bretscher
Elgin, IL, USA   USA
Sign in to contact
Looks like a neat setup but possibly rather difficult for an amateur to replicate.

Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
spitfire50 Avatar
spitfire50 Paul Mugford
Rochester, N.H., USA   USA
Sign in to contact
In reply to # 1730729 by 14GPDJENGINEERING Here is the design I stole from Rick Cline -- crude but it works. I sleeved two OE 5/8 master cylinders with some stainless steel tube I had.

Dennis,
I have been toying with that idea for years. What size did you sleeve down to and where did you get seals for them?
Curious,
Paul



TRF# 10423

Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
Jediscuba Avatar
Jediscuba Steven Spandorf
Southampton, NY, USA   USA
Sign in to contact
Paul, and others ...
If you decide to sleeve the masters on your own, take care to make sure you buy seamless tubing.
Much of the stuff available looks seamless but is not. The outside seam is polished and can
be deceptive.

Steve

Was this post helpful or interesting?
Yes No Thank
. Become a Supporting Member to hide the ad above & support a small business

To reply or ask your own question:

or

Registration is FREE and takes less than a minute

Having trouble posting or changing forum settings?
Read the Forum Help (FAQ) or click Contact Support at the bottom of the page.



. Become a Supporting Member to hide the ad above & support a small business


Join The Club
Sign in to ask questions, share photos, and access all website features
Your Cars
1972 Triumph GT6 MkIII
Text Size
Larger Smaller
Reset Save