I spent the better part of today in 103F degrees replacing the master cylinder. Here are a few observations from doing this job.
- Definitely remove the 11/16" head fitting on the rear of the master cylinder where the brake line comes out. It gives the extra space to remove the master cylinder.
- If the old master cylinder has a 3/4" head cap screwed into the side of the rear of the master cylinder, remove it to allow the master cylinder to come out. My new one had the casting, but no hole or cap. I'm guessing this was where the old hydraulic low fluid sensor screwed into?
- I used the old plunger rod attached to the fork. I could not free the threaded rod to place it on the new plunger. I used plenty of force and was worried I would bend the forks if I used more force. The threads seem to be frozen.
- My truck has a brake line quite close to the exact area where you need space to remove the master cylinder, right next to the round hole in the frame. I saw two small threaded holes up higher on the frame and suspect those were fastener holes for an original brake line that did not pass so close to the master cylinder. So every truck can be altered by previous motor pool maintenance, as was my brake line and no fourth mounting bolt.
- Reaching over the top of the air pack and coming from behind the air pack, I was able to remove and install the brake line on the master cylinder with a proper flair wrench. No stripping of the brake line head that way.
In the next few days, I will fill and bleed the system. First I have to install my Big Mike's remote reservoir kit (that I bought back in 2013!).