At 05:48 PM 2/23/2007 -0800, you wrote: > > I always thought it was an attempt to do the "metering" through the > > resevoir and piston sizes in the MC. > >Ohh, that could be tricky -- so there could be an early vs. late >master cylinder? > >I've got a bunch of TSMs coming, and I might beg a few pages of data >from listers for years I can't get. But let me get it all together >first. I have a complete set. What do you want? For that matter, I have some extras for sale: http://richmondrambler.tripod.com/literature.html By the way, a lot of the diddling with the brakes was driven by trying to comply with (unfunded) federal mandates. The feds began issuing regulations on brakes (and quite a few other things) beginning in 1970. The regs often carried specs that changed every year (which I am certain really frazzled the engineers). Some specified lock-up tendencies, there was one specifying brake area based on type of brake and weight of vehicle, another that brakes had to operate to a certain spec under the car's maximum load, etc. Many of them made little sense. For instance, any moron can tell you that a brake system tuned to stop the car efficiently under full rated load (four people, the family dog, and two hundred pounds of luggage plus the beer cooler) is going to be a lot less efficient under normal load (one driver going to work every day). It was for this reason that almost all cars (especially smaller ones) in the late seventies and early eighties had serious problems with severe rear-wheel lockup. -- Marc _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list