does anyone know of a magazine or such that has covered doing a disc conversion yourself and not buying a pricey off the shelf jobby ??
cheer's
Chris<br>
I'd go for a proper kit too, but I am intrigued as to why standard roller bearings should be considered unsuitable. Jonathan, could you please post a a brief analysis of why standard bearings are unsuitable. I stress that it's no criticism of your opinion, I just genuinely cannot see why, and would like to know. I also stress that I agree with you: with brakes a "proper" solution must be used. Thanks.Hmm, disc brakes on std roller bearings, think I'd save up for a proper kit
The cars the bigger drums originally came from (Wolseley 1500/Riley 1.5) had the exact same hubs/bearings as the Minor, so the original factory designers obviously didn't think it was a problem.Arnie wrote:Could the same argument be applied if you are using larger drum brakes, their claimed greater power applying higher stresses to the hubs?
just fit them the wrong way round like i did! Mind you Even then they lasted 40 miles and needed a darn good hairpin to shake them loose!I've tried and failed so far to make the bearings give up!
I've been swapping between Sprite and Traveller recently depending on the weather and the Sprite feels about half the weight! (It's actually around 660kg vs. 850kg)eastona wrote:
Standard Midgets don't have servos, but have disc brakes. The pedal is acceptable and not too heavy. I'm not sure the car is a whole lot lighter than a Minor?