TomJ wrote: There are four different combo valves. Many truisms I've heard here are not necessarily true: * Front disc/rear drums, the rears always need/get proportioning. WRONG! * Front disc/rear drums, front always gets metering. WRONG! ------------- Enlighten me some more here! The second statement I've found to be true -- only a few years used a metering valve. It's more of a nicety than a necessity. Even if the rear brakes start to engage a split second before the fronts, that's not likely to cause any problems as the rears will still be far from locking up. I've never heard of a metering valve used without a proportioning valves, though it's possible to do so with aftermarket parts. I don't think any US factory car has ever had a metering valve that wasn't part of a combo valve, but I could be wrong. I've yet to find a COMBINATION VALVE that doesn't have rear proportioning built into it -- at least in an AMC. The TSM may not state the valve has it, just that it's a combination valve. The TSMs don't spell out things that are considered general knowledge, often just detailing a feature the first year or two it's used then glossing over it every other year. Some disc brake systems have a standard distribution block with a brake light switch only (after 1965, 65 and earlier don't have a brake light to switch!). Those had one of two brake balancing devices: 65-67 used non-servo rear brakes to reduce rear brake power, 68-70 used a separate proportioning valve in the rear brake line just in front of the rear axle. The 65-67 cars are probably the ones you're referring to as having no proportioning valve -- that's a fact! But there is still a *balancing*, if not a *proportioning*, device used. Stating that no proportioning valve is needed/used is a misrepresentation since *something* was used to balance braking action. You have to remember that most current AMC enthusiasts don't know much about pre 68 cars like you and I, and don't really care much about "Rambler era" cars. The majority are late 60s/early 70s fans. The older cars are just "interesting". Performance and parts availability are the driving factors, as well as styling. I put the 63-64 Classic/Ambo right up there with the Javelin as a "timeless" design, but others don't agree. Even the Hornet is close -- though I wonder how much of that is just familiarity since it was used so long. ----------------------- Disc brakes: basically there's K-H which are fine but rotors are expensive. There's the funny little 4cyl Bendix rotor, the low-drag caliper [and drum?] then the big single piston Bendix. That's the one everyone wants for swaps. Simple! ----------------------- Almost. 65-70 -- four piston Bendix 71-74 -- Kelsey Hayes 2.75" piston calipers 75-76 (all), 75-78 Matador -- Bendix 3.1" piston calipers 77-78 (except Matador) -- big bearing Bendix 2.6" piston calipers (used same bearings as big Bendix) 79-81 -- small bearing Bendix 2.6" piston calipers 82-83 (and through 88 Eagle/Jeep) -- GM 2.6" piston calipers The "small bearings" are typical for all six cylinder drum brake AMCs, the "big bearings" were used with V-8s. All K-H and 3.1" Bendix disk brakes use the big bearings, six or V-8. I did a little spindle research over the weekend and discovered that. All AMCs used only two bearing sizes. I think Andrew Hay pointed that out some time ago. 79-83 are the sought after brakes, with 82-83 considered the best because they are a low drag design. The big bearings make the 77-78 2.6" rotors more expensive, and the fact that they were only used two years. The rotor interchanges on all 79-83 models. A few people prefer the big Bendix brakes because the rotor is thicker -- it has more cooling capacity. Worth the extra dough for the rotors on a road racer, not important for a street or drag car. It takes some hard driving to heat up the thinner rotor (0.88" compared to 1.125"... check the books on those numbers though, might be a bit less than 1.125"... 79-83 only, some earlier ones are different, 73 are all 0.94"-1.00") The factory 77-78 2.6" calipers reportedly had a phenolic piston, but rebuilds use steel. I've never seen an original caliper that hasn't been rebuilt -- probably because the phenolic piston supposedly started leaking after a few years use. I doubt an original caliper exists on a car that was driven much! I've never seen four piston Bendix brakes on a six cylinder car from the factory, probably seen as a waste, could have been a V-8 only option. Part numbers, incidentally, don't help a thing when identifying parts interchangeability! Numbers seemed to change for no apparent reason for parts that I know look identical. Maybe a new casting die was made or the material the part was made from changed, who knows? There's no way to find out now! Tom knows I'm not trying to be argumentative -- we had a little discussion about these "debates" off-line. Just wanted everyone else to know! _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list