Brake master cylinder, anybody tried one of these?
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- Minor Fan
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Brake master cylinder, anybody tried one of these?
From an American web site this is apparently the master cylinder off a AMC of some sort dosnt look to hard to fabicate a bracket to suit cant find any dimensions unfortunatly and I know you cant judge from photos but looks feasable to me would give twin circuit brakes<br>
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I'll see you on the otherside'!
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- Minor Legend
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I was talking about this very thing with a chap who used to race moggies in NZ. He used a ford master cylinder with a remote tank. He made a bracket to fit it in the chassis leg and had to drill an extra couple of holes. Sounds like a good idea, but the main reasoning for it was to use a more suitable master cylinder bore for his brake setup to avoid the extra complication of a servo as well as the safety of a dual line braking system.
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- Minor Fan
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Why ?
If thats aimed at me Johnathon I was in a car (mini) that drove into the back of a double decker bus due to a single circuit brake system failure, I still get nightmares about being trapped in the back because the shell distorted, ever since then I,ve made sure my cars have 'split circuit' brakes and all of them have apart from the moggie, if it was aimed at the bloke who didnt want to drill the chassis then I agree why not!
If thats aimed at me Johnathon I was in a car (mini) that drove into the back of a double decker bus due to a single circuit brake system failure, I still get nightmares about being trapped in the back because the shell distorted, ever since then I,ve made sure my cars have 'split circuit' brakes and all of them have apart from the moggie, if it was aimed at the bloke who didnt want to drill the chassis then I agree why not!
I'll see you on the otherside'!
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- Minor Fan
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- Minor Legend
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I've suffered numerous brake failures in my moggy. Dual circuit is definitely the holy grail in my book.
Could you not make the connections with some kind of flexi - attach them first then feed the hoses through the holes as you fit the cylinder?
Like you do with taps and flexible plumbing hoses.
Could you not make the connections with some kind of flexi - attach them first then feed the hoses through the holes as you fit the cylinder?
Like you do with taps and flexible plumbing hoses.
What would Macgyver do..?


Indeed - I suppose so - or even just sharp bends in the bundy pipe without kinking it, I suppose. But in all my Minor and Mini years - i've never had 'sudden' brake failure - there has always been some sort of warning - long pedal/spongey pedal that sort of thing. And anyway - that's what the handbrake is for! I did lose one half of the brakes in my TR7 - and I can tell you the (front) half that remained was bluddy useless. The pedal went very nearly to the floor and the the braking was just hopeless - the handbrake was far better at stopping the car. So don't put too much reliance on dual circuit brakes -always 'test' the brakes before you are going to NEED them.



- Scott
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You could always get a conversion kit like this one:
http://members.ozemail.com.au/%7Eminort ... 20PAGE.pdf
Nice and simple, fits in the original position & has a remote reservoir.
http://members.ozemail.com.au/%7Eminort ... 20PAGE.pdf
Nice and simple, fits in the original position & has a remote reservoir.
Scott
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- Minor Fan
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- Minor Fan
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Has anyone looked at the mgb master cylinder? Its dual circuit and small enough to fit into the chassis rail. I used it with the stock morris brake lines. The linkage is somewhat tricky between the pedal and the plunger but not really a huge deal. Also a remote reservoir needs to be used but also not a huge deal. Just my two cents. (All you series mm guys, if your looking for a good strong rear end and good front brakes, you should look into converting to the mgb rear end and mgb disc brakes. Coupled with the mgb master cylinder you'll have a "stop on a dime with 9 cents to spare" morris and still be able to keep the stock wheels. Not to mention have a much bigger variety of Japanese alloys to choose from.)