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Carrera Brake upgrade questions
So I've been reading posts about brake upgrades and the pieces involved. I have a couple issues though that I hoped y'all could help clarify and point me in the right direction on. Thanks in advance :-)
I'm upgrading a '74 911 to 3.5" spaced bilstein struts and aluminum front crossmember. I have those bits, along with the rest of the front suspension bolted up, but not all tightened down (except for the a-arm related bolts as I had to work forever to get the polybronze to spin freely when torqued down). I also have a set of carrera brakes (non-boosted setup)-- front and rear calipers, rotors, and master cylinder. I have an adjustable tilton biasing valve on order as I don't have the stock valve. First Problem: with the crossmember in place the new master cylinder won't fit into place. Measuring the MC and the distance from the tub to the crossmember it appears to be about the same length -- begging the question will it fit at all?? Should I remove the front crossmember to fit this MC, or should I go with another MC? The feed line entry on the new MC is different from the old one, and looks like it gets in the way of the tie rod boots - does this issue require angled feed line fittings on the MC (one or both?)? If I should switch to a different MC than the stock carrera one - which should I use? The car's previous MC doesn't garner my trust so I would buy a new one even if that was the proper size for the new calipers. Speaking of feed lines - they are very expensive from pelican for the silly plastic lines. What size line can I use to replace the expensive plastic sections and can I run 2 continuous pieces from the resevoir to the adapter bits on the MC? I also want to change out all my hard brake lines except the one through the tunnel. This seems like a good time because I can plumb in the tilton valve somewhere convenient while I'm at it. I've read in some posts about using SS line everywhere instead of hard lines. That seems like it would be easier as I wouldn't need to buy a flare tool and struggle with the tube bending. Thoughts on this issue like replacement frequency or total cost vs. a flare tool and hardware? Additionally, I took the stock '74 front hubs off the stock '74 rotors last night, but haven't checked the new carrera rotors for fit. Is there anything I should expect with this process (like needing longer mounting bolts and if so what size, or front wheel hub and bearings not fitting the turbo struts at all)? There's plenty of other murphy's law problems that have come up, but I think that's most of the brake specific issues. Thanks!
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74 911 with '95 3.6l |
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early Carrera '73-77 late Carrera '84-89 The early Carrera used 282x20 & 290x20 mm rotors & either S or A front calipers w/ M rear calipers Late Carrera used 24 mm thick rotors and wide versions of the A and M calipers, the wide M's also had bigger pistons and needed a fairly aggressive 33 bar p/v. My updated brake data page is bing moved to here, check it out for fuller details. So the 1st issue is which set of Carrera brakes do you have? the 2nd issue is that only the late Carrera brakes want or need a p/v. If you have late Carrera fronts then the p/v can still be avoided by leaving the stock M rears w/ the late Carrera fronts. Quote:
I would use the stock feeds. Stock '74 hubs are fine w/ any of the Carrera calipers and rotors
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Bill Verburg '76 Carrera 3.6RS(nee C3/hotrod), '95 993RS/CS(clone) | Pelican Home |Rennlist Wheels |Rennlist Brakes | |
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Thanks for all the info Bill! ...
1st issue: I have the late carrera brakes 2nd issue: I'd like to not use the old brakes at all, which means I'll need the proportioning valve. Does the tilton knob unit provide enough "proportioning" (restriction?) to replace the stock unit, and if so will it still be in an adjustment range so that with different tire/weight setups I can get the brake lockup dialed in properly? Master Cylinder: I read here about master cylider sizing saying that: Quote:
You mention that the stock 19.05 MC is what I should use. Would going with the carrera MC make the leg effort greater for a given stop? I definately would like to not need to squat press the brake pedal all the time :-) At the same time, would going with the 19.05 MC and the tilton valve offer a good combination? Thanks again so much! This is a great learning process, hopefully others enjoy it too. Anybody reading have any thoughts on this other thread???
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74 911 with '95 3.6l |
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I'm with Bill on the MC. No need to change to anything larger. I installed the 23mm with my 930 brakes and I've second-guessed that decision (one school of thought says to stick with the 19mm). It takes alot of "leg" to get those stoppers stoppin.
IMO, messing with the proportioning valve is going to be a pain in the a$$ for very little gain. I would rebuild your current rears, get new lines, pads, and rotors, and skip the Tilton valve. |
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ok late Carrera all around
the tilton will be fine, if this is a track car mount it where you can get at it easily, the factory ran the rear lines up out of the center tunnel by the drivers side ![]() for a street car mount it out of the way. Master cylinder sizing is a balancing act between pedal feel, moving a large enough volume of fluid and leg force needed to generate adequate line pressures. Carrera and 911 sized caliper pistons want ~19-21mm m/c pistons, the bigger the m/c the better the feel but the more leg is needed so power assist becomes more desirable. If you go too big then line pressures suffer especialy w/o boost.
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Bill Verburg '76 Carrera 3.6RS(nee C3/hotrod), '95 993RS/CS(clone) | Pelican Home |Rennlist Wheels |Rennlist Brakes | |
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The 930 calipers need 20.5-25mm m/c yes, you can get away w/ the 20.6mm SC/Carrera m/c but pedal feel suffers, the brakes get touchey, especially w/ boost. 23.8mm is very nicely sized but needs more leg than many like. Boost is the solution you can use either the 7" or 8" vacuum can to fine tune, the 8 gives you more boost the 7 less.
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Bill Verburg '76 Carrera 3.6RS(nee C3/hotrod), '95 993RS/CS(clone) | Pelican Home |Rennlist Wheels |Rennlist Brakes | |
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Nice picture :-) Thanks again for the help - I think I'll try putting the P/V in the smuggler's box and probably get a new 19mm MC...
Since the stock feed lines are toast and they are $180 for two plastic tubes, do you happen to know the size of the line needed in order to make new ones? The image on pelican for the '74 feed lines shows the metal ends on the feed lines which seems incorrect. My brake system had a few inches of braided hose from the resevoir fittings (2), then two plastic lines that fit inside the braided hose and go down to the master cylinder, where the plastic line fits over 2 barbed fittings that are in the rubber grommets. Other posts suggest making extensions for this system, but I haven't found the diameter listed in the posts that would successfully fit the resevoir tips and the MC attached bits. Pelican sells "999-181-021-50-M107" which is supposed to replace the braided section going from resevoir to feed lines. Can I just use longer lengths of this line to go all the way to the M/C, or would I need a slightly smaller diameter line at the M/C end and have to mate the two somehow? oh, and for repetition from other posts sake...as I understand it the hard lines are Edit: 3/16" with 10x1.00mm ISO bubble flare ends. Do I have that right? thanks, matt
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74 911 with '95 3.6l Last edited by cali74; 09-27-2006 at 10:06 AM.. |
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Quote:
Quote:
the hard lines are 3/16", ~4.6mm, 10x1.0 fittings, bubble flare,
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Bill Verburg '76 Carrera 3.6RS(nee C3/hotrod), '95 993RS/CS(clone) | Pelican Home |Rennlist Wheels |Rennlist Brakes | |
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