Rattlewagon;387969
[COLOR=White said:
The other is that if I did get one of those trucks the possibility of having to source replacement parts on a truck that has unique system that is kind of rare is also enough to worry me. Meaning, what if something breaks that is specific to a dual system truck and I can’t find a replacement? I’ll be stuck. Know what I mean? If there is a system that exists in the world that can be adapted then in my opinion, any truck would do and we all would benefit.[/color]
Someone on this site has adapted a "Hydro-Max" brake master cylinder (search for that, "hydromax" and "hydroboost", they have been used interchangably in discussion but the first one is the brand name). Very common on medium duty trucks with hydraulic brakes. This is a dual outlet, hydraulically boosted system (search for that as well, bone yard retrofits and 5 ton pumps have been used). This is boosted in a way more familiar on modern stuff. That is, the boost is a mechanical amplification of your pedal linkage prior to the master cylinder, versus the air assist in a deuce where the fluid output pressure is boosted "in line" but after the master cylinder. They are most common with the same bore for the front and rear outlets, which means you could plumb one outlet to any axle (most likely the front I would think) and the rears from the other outlet. Then all braking pressure would remain balanced, as it is in the existing system, eliminating the need for any proportioning valves. The installation here was on the firewall with a swinging pedal, however I'm sure with a little bit of creativity the assembly could be placed under the cab to use the existing pedal as well.
Hey Guys !! I am wondering if you could mod a brake system using a Dual chamber MC ?? and still use one air pak ?? And just split the line to the front chamber for the front and Back lines to the back chamber ?? Instead of having to reengineer the system ?? And I wonder if that mod could be used on a 5 Ton as well !!
I think I understand what you're saying here... But as soon as you "T" anything, you've lost all of the redundancy of a dual master cylinder. Same issue. Any one failure will vent pressure from BOTH outlets of the master cylinder. By combining the outlets, you've only added an additional failure point.