AMC used two pressure settings: 400 psi for Rebel/Matador/Ambo, 200 psi for everyting else. So there was no fine tuning. The easiest thing to do is get an adjustable proportioning valve and install it in the rear brake line after the existing junction block. You can get them that have pressure settings on them -- check various hot rod shops, Summit, and Jegs. That would make it easy -- just set it to 400 psi. Alternately, get a GM combo valve. MP Brakes (www.mpbrakes.com) recommends (and sells) that. It's used on all there hot rod and muscle car installations. I don't know what psi it's set at, neither do they for that matter. I suspect it's somewhere between 200 and 400 psi though. It will take a little more plumbing work. Any valve from a big AMC will work, but note that in the 70s the big car combo valve also had a metering function. That prevents the front brakes from applying until ~100 psi is built up (a fraction of a second). It takes ~100 psi to overcome the springs in drum brakes, so the metering valve makes sure all four brakes apply at the same time. The drawback is the plumbing -- two lines go fromt the master cylinder to the combo valve with NO "T" to the right front caliper. The combo valve then has three lines from it -- both front lines and a rear line. I don't know if this setup was used through 78 or not, but as far as I've been able to determine metering was never used on small cars. The late model (80s) small car/Eagle comboi valve should work equally well -- it's a GM combo valve. The small cars got heavier as time and safety regs progressed. Check out XJ Cherokees as well. I've got an aluminum master cylinder and combo valve (mounted very near the master) from one of those that I'd intended to use, then decided to convert a Ford Ranger power brake booster and master. With the adjustable valve you can get a short length of brake line (6" is the shortest I've seen) and connect it directly to the junction block. Then make an "S" bend in the original line and no lines will need to be cut. Just make sure the "S" bend doesn't put the line to close to the exhaust. ----- original message -------- I'm trying to get started on changing over my Rebel to disc brakes from drum. I have a complete front brake setup that I've had for yrs - all well-worn, but all there. I had forgot what it came from, but from doing some investigation, and comparing pictures of the calipers on www.advanceautoparts.com, it looks to be the later ones that were used on Eagles, some Jeeps, '82-3 Concords and Spirits. I was gonna test fit everything together on the car, then exchange the calipers and rotors for new/rebuilt. What I can't find is the proper proportioning valve for this setup. Advance Auto has no listing. I'd think that any disc brake car remote mounted valve would work. Anyone have ideas on where to find one? I haven't explored the Napa site yet, or Autozone for that matter, but thought I'd throw that out there. I'll probably keep it as manual disc for now, just want it valved right; will sure be better than the front drum setup I have on it now. _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com