On Wed, 23 Apr 2008, Frank Swygert wrote: > It's all but impossible to get drum brakes in perfect unison > all the time. Different factors lead to slightly different > wear in one corner or another. The self adjusters help a > lot, but aren't perfect. I'll second that. I'm doing 350 miles a week on my 63 American with 9 x 2.5 drums up front. On the whole, they are balanced well, left to right. But occasionally there's a slight side bias for a stop or two or three. If they get wet, all bets are off! But day to day, they are equal. In really fast/hard stops they're definitely not as even as discs on my Hornet or Classic, you need to guide them a bit with the steering wheel. That's basically never true with decent discs, which pull mainly straight without touching the steering wheel. My right front has a very faint tick tick tick that completely disappears with the slightest touch of the brakes. No effect on braking, likely it's lodged dirt or shoe fragment. I will pull the wheel and take a look "soon", though I doubt it's anything worth worrying about. Pretty much, drums are fussier than discs. The degree to which this is "bad" depends on your expectations :-) Me, when I pull the wheel, I will be reexamining my new idea to get 10" drums up there... :-) It's a fun project, home-made hotrod brakes, I know discs would be easier and probably cost less! _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list