Artie, did you bleed the brakes recently? If not, do you have a leak in the brake system? The brake valve has a pressure differential switch in it. If the pressure on one side of the switch (front or rear brakes) drops the switch slides over and turns the light on. Bleeding the brakes will "trip" the switch. I know a lot of people will call this a "proportioning valve" or a "combination (combo) valve". Pre 71 AMCs used the same junction block and switch as drum brakes (pre 66 don't have a brake light switch at all). If it came with disc brakes there is a separate proportioning valve near the rear axle in the line (67-70 -- 65 and 66 models used a lower stopping power non-servo rear drum brake assembly instead). Sometimes people forget that things used to be done differently! Of course your car could have been upgraded to a later system. The pin is on those as well. You can find the procedure outlined in the 73 TSM on-line at http://www.tocmp.com/tOCMP/chassis/amc%20site%203/indexold.html. If yours has the original, follow the instructions for drum brakes. If a newer model combo valve, for disc brakes. Basically, you need to remove the plunger in the center (drum/early disc), step on the brake pedal hard, then reinstall the plunger. It should center and turn the brake light off unless there's a problem with the brakes and pressure isn't equal on both sides. It won't leak from the switch hole unless the switch is bad. The newer type combo valve will reset itself, and the switch doesn't need to come out for bleeding. The manual refers to a "metering function". Unless you have the type combo valve with metering (mostly 71-78 big cars), ignore it. A combo valve with metering will have a line to each front wheel from the valve. Those without (the most common) have a T in the line from the master to the valve for the left front wheel with the right wheel only connected to the valve. Metering prevents pressure from going to the front brakes until enough pressure has built up to overcome the springs in the rear drum brakes (~100 psi). This way all four brakes engage at the same time. Early small cars (71-~75) used metering in the combo valve, later ones don't. Few modern cars use the metering function in their combo valves. > ----- Original Message ----- > From: A.F schurst@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > To: eddiestakes@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Sent: Thursday, December 28, 2006 11:05 AM > Subject: Brake light > > > Hello , > I have a SC/Rambler and the brake light is constantly on ( I > know I could unplug it-or tape over the light) . Do you have or know > where I could get a brake proportional valve or can they be opened > and repaired. I recalled reading something about a repair kit. The > brakes do feel a little biased to the front. Any help would be > great. Keep up the humor, I had people at work crying over that > Black beauty AMX partout on Ebay. > Thanks Artie Foley _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com