I have gone over the breaks until I am sick of playing with them. I followed the adjustment procedures as outlined in the TM to the -T-.
The Mfg. of the master cylinder that I installed says I had to " power Bleed" the system. Not having any such power bleeder I took it to the local break shop here. The owner has worked on many older systems and was very familiar with the old dodge system.
I told the owner what was going on. He asked if I had bled the breaks and I replied "yes" several times and found no air.
He looked at the system and said, " you need to apply a tiny bit of pressure on the master cylinder plunger so it does not come back so far. It is allowing all your pressure to bleed off. He adjusted it a bit and the breaks have worked just fine now for several months of driving.
I was worried that they would drag but no such problem has happened. I took the truck out for several miles of in town driving where the breaks got used a lot. I drove home and jacked it up and spun each wheel to see if any were draging and al was well. I will keep it this way and see what happens in warmer weather. But so far so good.
I looked inside the cylinder and it looked like if I let the piston go fully forward it let the seal pass a tiny drill hole that bleed off any pressure. I am not talking about a half inch of reduction, I am talking about applying only maybe a 1/16 of an inch of pressure on the piston from fully out.
Like I said i am going to keep an eye on it and see how it goes.
The Mfg. of the master cylinder that I installed says I had to " power Bleed" the system. Not having any such power bleeder I took it to the local break shop here. The owner has worked on many older systems and was very familiar with the old dodge system.
I told the owner what was going on. He asked if I had bled the breaks and I replied "yes" several times and found no air.
He looked at the system and said, " you need to apply a tiny bit of pressure on the master cylinder plunger so it does not come back so far. It is allowing all your pressure to bleed off. He adjusted it a bit and the breaks have worked just fine now for several months of driving.
I was worried that they would drag but no such problem has happened. I took the truck out for several miles of in town driving where the breaks got used a lot. I drove home and jacked it up and spun each wheel to see if any were draging and al was well. I will keep it this way and see what happens in warmer weather. But so far so good.
I looked inside the cylinder and it looked like if I let the piston go fully forward it let the seal pass a tiny drill hole that bleed off any pressure. I am not talking about a half inch of reduction, I am talking about applying only maybe a 1/16 of an inch of pressure on the piston from fully out.
Like I said i am going to keep an eye on it and see how it goes.
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