TheMiniMan wrote:
if you look at a mini limiting valve, it hardly travels a few mms,,, then it locks up, so very little pedal travel occurs with this minimal amount of limit valve piston travel,,, so if the Tilton has quite a long bore & the piston moves quite a long way then i`d be isolating that valve (for the monet as a test) to see if your pedal recovers
smiling_simon wrote:
The pressure in the system will be less for the same amount of pedal effort (your foot) as you have changed the dynamics of the braking system. Same thing happened when I put 4 pots on the front end instead of 2 pots. The brake pedal goes down to the same distance as you've quoted now. You're right, it screws up your heel and toe action and takes confidence away from you.
Sounds like your limiter is giving too much pressure to the rears (taking that pressure away from the fronts), or that you need to change your master cylinder from lower bore to a higher bore to decrease pedal travel.
to be clear, it had cooper s discs and 2 spot calipers before, a resleeved cooper s master cylinder and rear wheel cylinders. it also had a standard bias valve. After being fitted a few years ago and some long storage periods these were a bit shagged and especially after the lengthy transport some corrosion siezed up the caliper pistons.
I wanted to install the hydraulic handbrake when i was renewing the rest and also wanted the convenience of an adjustable bias plumbed in the line upstream of the handbrake.
NOW it has cooper s discs and new 2 spot calipers, a new cooper s master cylinder and rear wheel cylinders. The only difference in terms of volumes is that there is now the bias valve and hydraulic handbrake and the original bias valve is replaced by a T-piece. So there is no difference in the ratio of master to caliper or wheel cylinders. No difference in the ratios means that there should be no difference in pedal feel and effort. In theory the hydraulic handbrake makes no difference to the amount of pressure felt at the rear wheel cylinders when using the footbrake.
I think that Simon and Matt may have hit on the cause in the bias valve. Even with it fully adjusted to minimise the rear bias, the pedal still has to move too far. The bore of the Tilton one might be much less than the standard Mini one, which could cause the problem.
thanks for the suggestions
michael
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