They're self-adjusting. I popped those little babies in myself, and their boxes were labeled L and R. Hoses are new, too. Shoes are long to the back, short to the front. Rear drums resurfaced, front drums new. I took it to the end of my small subdivision road (maybe about 6 houses worth), stopped at the stop sign, and backed up to my house, hitting brakes on and off as I went. Drove forward, hit brakes nice and calm - no issues. Hit them harder, and it pulled left. Not as bad as before. I also got it up to speed and braked a little harder. Could be the front end as was suggested. The front end is loose, "wandering", and needs strut rod bushings. The car drove fine running errands, but I kept it under 45 and didn't do any emergency braking. I'll call a shop and bring it in for front-end work. Don't want it darting left under heavy braking on two lane roads. That might hurt. Trying to decide if I want to do the strut rod bushings myself, or pony up and get it done - then just have the front end checked once I'm done. There's an AMCRC member in my town that gets his 64 American serviced at a local station - so I know they are very familiar with Rambler Americans. I'm just cheap. On Mon, Apr 21, 2008 at 1:28 PM, Sandwich Maker <adh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > " From: "Bruce Griffis" <bruce.griffis@xxxxxxxxx> > " > " [] > > " > " I'm going to back it up a bunch more, hitting the brakes - but I don't > " think that's going to do the trick. > > it won't do a thing. afaik the american didn't get self-adjusting > drums until '67 or '68. for sure both my '66s didn't have them. > ________________________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list