rubicon_in_ga
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- Covington, GA
So first off, I haven't gotten my first Deuce yet. I'm considering my options and whatnot, but I'm trying to get my knowledge and wisdom built up way before I take the plunge. Admittedly, I'm a noob when it comes to alot of this.
Now, unlike alot of guys who wanna make an almost 60 year old truck do the quarter mile like a tricked out 1000hp F250. . . I am FINE with slow. My concern is actually the brakes. Just how bad are they, really?
I've had two questionable experiences with braking issues before, and neither were anything I care to remember, but for reference sake, here goes:
1976 CJ7, 258 inline six, 33" Super Swampers, and yes, four wheel DRUM brakes. Had a school bus of all things pull out in front of me while I was doing about 45mph coming down a long hill, and locked up all four brakes. Let me tell you. . . the sound of 12.5" wide rubber from four tires simultaneously locking up and scraping asphalt as I prayed I didn't hit a bus. . . is enough to make you religious in a hurry.
2004 Jeep Wrangler Rubicon, 4.0 inline six, 35" BFG Mud Terrains, and four wheel DISC brakes. The issue here wasn't locking them up. It was flat out inability to stop. I had replaced the front pads with some 'high quality' name brand auto parts big box store pads, only to realize later, those tend to be ceramic and are designed for reduced brake dust. I.e, less stopping power. There's nothing quite like trying to slow down on the interstate due to traffic ahead, only to find. . . you're not slowing down. I've since changed the pads to EBC YellowStuff pads (at a whooping $150ish a set) which (if memory serves) are high friction pads designed for large pickups and towing applications. Sure the brake dust sucks, but the thing stops on a dime now.
So, before I go all crazy and excited about buying my first Duece, I wanna make sure the darn thing will actually STOP when I want it to. I intend to follow all the normal safety precautions, don't follow too close, give myself PLENTY of stopping distance, stay off the interstates if at all possible, and first and foremost INSPECT INSPECT INSPECT and make sure EVERYTHING is working correctly before driving her.
But lets say I do all that. How bad is it stopping a 13,000lb truck like this with drum brakes? Am I going to be standing on the brake pedal with both feet just to get her to slow down, or is braking comparable to a normal vehicle, all other things considered (believe me, I know this isn't a Honda Civic)? I'd rather not have to keep a spare change of underwear in my toolbox every time I take her out for a drive.
Thanks a bunch!
Rubicon
Now, unlike alot of guys who wanna make an almost 60 year old truck do the quarter mile like a tricked out 1000hp F250. . . I am FINE with slow. My concern is actually the brakes. Just how bad are they, really?
I've had two questionable experiences with braking issues before, and neither were anything I care to remember, but for reference sake, here goes:
1976 CJ7, 258 inline six, 33" Super Swampers, and yes, four wheel DRUM brakes. Had a school bus of all things pull out in front of me while I was doing about 45mph coming down a long hill, and locked up all four brakes. Let me tell you. . . the sound of 12.5" wide rubber from four tires simultaneously locking up and scraping asphalt as I prayed I didn't hit a bus. . . is enough to make you religious in a hurry.
2004 Jeep Wrangler Rubicon, 4.0 inline six, 35" BFG Mud Terrains, and four wheel DISC brakes. The issue here wasn't locking them up. It was flat out inability to stop. I had replaced the front pads with some 'high quality' name brand auto parts big box store pads, only to realize later, those tend to be ceramic and are designed for reduced brake dust. I.e, less stopping power. There's nothing quite like trying to slow down on the interstate due to traffic ahead, only to find. . . you're not slowing down. I've since changed the pads to EBC YellowStuff pads (at a whooping $150ish a set) which (if memory serves) are high friction pads designed for large pickups and towing applications. Sure the brake dust sucks, but the thing stops on a dime now.
So, before I go all crazy and excited about buying my first Duece, I wanna make sure the darn thing will actually STOP when I want it to. I intend to follow all the normal safety precautions, don't follow too close, give myself PLENTY of stopping distance, stay off the interstates if at all possible, and first and foremost INSPECT INSPECT INSPECT and make sure EVERYTHING is working correctly before driving her.
But lets say I do all that. How bad is it stopping a 13,000lb truck like this with drum brakes? Am I going to be standing on the brake pedal with both feet just to get her to slow down, or is braking comparable to a normal vehicle, all other things considered (believe me, I know this isn't a Honda Civic)? I'd rather not have to keep a spare change of underwear in my toolbox every time I take her out for a drive.
Thanks a bunch!
Rubicon