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Deuce Brakes

Elk1111

Well-known member
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490
63
Location
Las Cruces NM
I have a friend stuck in Pecos Texas with a hard brake pedal and the rear brakes smoking. Any ideas how to do a roadside repair to get him rolling again.
 

Slate

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
682
378
63
Location
Ozona Texas
Maybe open service side of air just a hair, to let vent.

Sent from my moto z3 using Tapatalk
 

Slate

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
682
378
63
Location
Ozona Texas
Take the hotttest drum and disconnect the hydraulic line and plug it.
I had someone put tacks or small nails to seal off one of mine before. Head was perfect size to seal the line. Wondered why brakes wouldn't work.

Sent from my moto z3 using Tapatalk
 

Elk1111

Well-known member
282
490
63
Location
Las Cruces NM
I had him back off the brake shoes a bit and let it cool down. Pedal is back to normal. He’s rolling again and will stop every 25-50 miles to reassess. He’s got 225 miles to go.
Does anyone know how much a bobbed deuce weighs in case we have to trailer it?
 

Menaces Nemesis

"Little Black Truck" Conservator
Steel Soldiers Supporter
333
262
63
Location
Denver, Colorado
Bleed hole in master cylinder (small hole to the rear, at the bottom) clogged or sticky airpack! My 5 cents.
And, IIRC, if the Master Cylinder rod doesn't have enough free play travel, then it can't vent the pressure when the brakes are released, through that little hole, back into the reservoir.
 

Ferroequinologist

Resident railroad expert
Steel Soldiers Supporter
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Location
Liberty Hill, SC
And, IIRC, if the Master Cylinder rod doesn't have enough free play travel, then it can't vent the pressure when the brakes are released, through that little hole, back into the reservoir.
This is exactly what happened with my m818, I had replaced the MC and the rod was just a tad too long... kept having to stop and open a bleed screw. Thought I got trash in the MC or air pack. Adjusted rod and was smooth sailing.
 

tobyS

Well-known member
4,832
833
113
Location
IN
A bobbed deuce. Unless an A3, it has 1 3/8" cups in the wheel cylinders. The A3 uses a 1 1/2" cylinder on the front and has1 3/8" on the back.

Thing is, the 11/2" wheel cylinders will fit with a small rod length modification on both front and back on the deuce and since the back axle is removed, even the stock system single circuit, can deliver about 20% more force. The volume of fluid on 6 wheels with 1 3/8" is about equal to 4 wheels with 1 1/2"

With everyone going to even bigger singles than the 14.5 on the A3, there is a need for more braking force so please consider using the 1 1/2 like the A3 front allthe way around your bob deuce
 
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