On Sun, Mar 15, 2009 at 1:27 PM, russ hathaway <russh97309@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > The only thing I liked about the discs was the pedal feel, it felt more true as I remember. Yeah, I think in this age of "universal" discs the feel of drums scares people, but it's just the relatively long stroke that does that I think. Taking up the slack that lowers friction! But of course I got used to it and if they were to actually develop a problem (leak, bum adjuster, etc) I'm quite sure I coudl feel it. > But I went back to the drums as I got better stopping and gas miliage with them. I hadn't thought of the drag aspect of discs. The low-drag 80's discs seem a little nicer in the regard. On my Hornet, Ispent a little effort de-nicking the (Bendix) mounting shoe business with a file and bought new keys (whatever those things are called), and greased it OK and I think that helps. Apparently the system relies on a small amount of runout always present in real life rotors to tap the piston back and to tap the caliper back. Seems like a crock to me, but it works OK when perfect. > Drums are more work to maintain since they need adjusting but I am a maintenance nut. I prefer to know what is going on with the car before it breaks down Yeah, maintenance pays. These things are old! I've had really good luck with the self-adjusters doing their job. I pop a wheel off every so often just to look-see (Id rather the car drop dead in my driveway than on the road too), and that reminds me, I haven't looked at the rear brakes since last spring! _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list