albino235 wrote:
Now, to "improve the performance" (reduce pedal pressure and travel) of the drums we can:
- Have drums machined or buy new ones - definitely buy new drums, machining drums oversize makes it that much harder to adjust them, and you lose half of the life of the shoes - they just don't have enough meat to reach out to the friction surface
- Keep them well adjusted - that's the key with drums, gotta keep them adjusted
- fit minifins (do these actually help??? better cooling I so less fade???) I have superfins on the back of my cooper, and I reckon it makes a real difference in motorkhanas, less weight means less inertia to stop, which means it's easier to pull them up.... but yeah, better cooling means less fade
- fit upgraded shoes? (Is there such a thing?) yes, there is such a thing, EBC etc. do them, I had some on the back of my van, but with disks on the front, I've no idea if they made any difference
I had a booster on drums, and I can't recall if it made a lot of difference, I think it did mean less maintenance with adjusting them..
I did a heap of front-end work on a clubman last year, and the brakes were utterly miserable - the front drums had been machined oversize, and while there was plenty of meat on the shoes, there was no adjustment left at all... when I stomped as hard as I could on the brakes, the back ones would *just* lock up, but nothing at the front. On top of that, there was (still is) a lot of play in the pedal, the master cylinder piston, and the pin that connects the two. It doesn't take a much wear in there to lose an inch of pedal travel, which equates to a fair amount of fluid that doesn't get pushed out into the wheel cylinders... when the bloke got the car back, he couldn't believe it, he thought it was like a new car
Mini Deluxes and K's did the Armstrong 500 at Bathurst on drums, they're good enough to stop our little cars, just gotta keep them in top condition - like everything else
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