Every 6 months our busses must pass a brake safety inspection. One of the tests is to take it out back and get the speed up to 20 mph then slam on the brakes. We have a nice testing device that measures brake force and total "G" force. We have to do 3 passes. All busses must pass at .500 "G" force on all 3 passes. If it doesn't pass then the brakes must be replaced on all axles. I believe you can get one of these testers for a pretty reasonable price and test your own truck.
You're probably the guy that can answer this question for me then. The Early Deuces, G749 series of trucks seem to begin leaking at the wheel cylinders, premature of scheduled maintenance. Mine have been good for 5 years, except for one WC on the bottom left rear, but I'm real light on the pedal and avoid heavy braking.
I have a wee understanding on hydraulics but the air-pak in the Early Deuce has me wondering.......
Do the Wheel Cylinders receive the same pressure that the 'input' from the pedal is giving them in an Air-Pak system??
Paslcal's theory tells me that if I slam on my brakes, the entire system receives the same in-put. I'm assuming it's designed to accept the maximum pedal inputs over and over and the only way to test it, by your bus example, is to tromp hard on the system to see if it breaks...the brakes.
I was trained not to use the brakes up so when we need them most, they are the best they can be. All compliments of my efficient Irish father and brilliant truckers.
Could we reduce damage to our braking systems by being lighter on the pedal, timing our stops and better situational awareness?