upgraded master cylinder binding brakes
Posted: 11 May 2018 12:44
Hi Guys,
I'm hoping someone may be able to help me with a problem on a Reliant Scimitar SE6a that's had a brake upgrade. I bought the car recently and I'm sure the guy i bought it from said the master cylinder had been replaced with one from a Rover. Searching on the internet i've discovered that the standard Lockheed brake system has a lot of similarities to a TR7 and SD1 and i've seen on this forum that some have upgraded their brakes using SD1 master cylinders so perhaps you can help.
Most of the brake components on my car are new within the last year so although i need to check everything i think my problem is likely to be the brake balance valve (same as TR7 SD1) or most likely the master cylinder.
When the brakes get hot the front brakes start to bind and the pedal gets harder and higher which i think is the fluid not being able to return to the reservoir when the master cylinder retracts or if the fluid expands from heat. This could be caused by two things.
1. The passage through the cylinder back to the reservoir is blocked.
2. There is insufficient clearance between the pedal and the master cylinder piston so it can't get back to the point where the fluid can flow backwards.
I've seen a lot of posts on various forums where the 2nd fault is the cause so i want to focus on this and ask for your help. I understand that when the SD1 upgrade has been done on TR7's there is talk about checking clearances and shimming or machining. Is this clearance between the master cylinder piston and the servo rod? I do have some free play between the pedal and servo rod.
How do i check and adjust the clearance?
what should the gap be?
Scimitar workshop manuals don't show enough detail on how they are put together and on the Scimitar forum no-one else seems to have done this modification so the advice i'm offered is all about checking the calipers, which i will do but i don't think that's the problem.
Any help would be gratefully received. A diagram showing how it all works would be brilliant.
Thanks
Kevin.
I'm hoping someone may be able to help me with a problem on a Reliant Scimitar SE6a that's had a brake upgrade. I bought the car recently and I'm sure the guy i bought it from said the master cylinder had been replaced with one from a Rover. Searching on the internet i've discovered that the standard Lockheed brake system has a lot of similarities to a TR7 and SD1 and i've seen on this forum that some have upgraded their brakes using SD1 master cylinders so perhaps you can help.
Most of the brake components on my car are new within the last year so although i need to check everything i think my problem is likely to be the brake balance valve (same as TR7 SD1) or most likely the master cylinder.
When the brakes get hot the front brakes start to bind and the pedal gets harder and higher which i think is the fluid not being able to return to the reservoir when the master cylinder retracts or if the fluid expands from heat. This could be caused by two things.
1. The passage through the cylinder back to the reservoir is blocked.
2. There is insufficient clearance between the pedal and the master cylinder piston so it can't get back to the point where the fluid can flow backwards.
I've seen a lot of posts on various forums where the 2nd fault is the cause so i want to focus on this and ask for your help. I understand that when the SD1 upgrade has been done on TR7's there is talk about checking clearances and shimming or machining. Is this clearance between the master cylinder piston and the servo rod? I do have some free play between the pedal and servo rod.
How do i check and adjust the clearance?
what should the gap be?
Scimitar workshop manuals don't show enough detail on how they are put together and on the Scimitar forum no-one else seems to have done this modification so the advice i'm offered is all about checking the calipers, which i will do but i don't think that's the problem.
Any help would be gratefully received. A diagram showing how it all works would be brilliant.
Thanks
Kevin.