A couple of questions. There are two types of masters. One for the long push 
rod and one for the short. If your booster has the short rod and your M/C is a 
long style you are not stroking the M/C. Also, did you bench bleed the M/C? 
This is necessary to get good pedal. One more, there should be two different 
mounting locations(holes) in the brake pedal arm for the clevis to attach to. 
The upper is for manual brakes and the lower for power.
Mike  
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Daniel Solomon 
  To: The Chevelle Mailing List 
  Sent: Monday, October 01, 2007 1:18 PM
  Subject: Re: [Chevelle-list] No Pedal - Poor Braking


  I didn't realize that there was a different master cylinder for power brakes. 
I bought the one I have on the car before I thought about adding the power 
assist.
  Sounds like its worth a try. Think I have a original 70 master cylinder in 
the shed. Maybe I will try my hand at a rebuild.

  Thanks, Dan
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Brad Waller 
    To: 'The Chevelle Mailing List' 
    Sent: Monday, October 01, 2007 11:15 AM
    Subject: Re: [Chevelle-list] No Pedal - Poor Braking


    My first thought was that the Master Cylinder was bad.  Even though it is 
new, it could be.  Or maybe you need to adjust the plunger/pedal?  It has been 
way too long for me, but I had the opposite problem of the brakes applying 
themselves after a while until the wheels locked.  That was from the 
adjustement bein off the other direction.  Too tight and the brakes are always 
on!  Maybe too loose and you get lots of travel and no pressure.

    Is the master the right one for the other parts? You say you might put the 
booster back on the firewall, so does this mean the master is a non-power 
master?  I'm not sure what would happen if you had a power master with no 
booster, but I think it would be a problem to add a booster to a manual master 
cylinder.  If things are mismatched here, maybe that is why you get no power 
from your braking?
    Brad Waller ([EMAIL PROTECTED])

    '66 Corvette | 327/dead | 4-speed | Wilwood Brakes | 245/45/16 BFG R1
    '67 Chevelle | ex-SS396 | 355/700R4 | F-Body Brakes | 275/40/17 Kumho MX



--------------------------------------------------------------------------
      From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Daniel 
Solomon
      Sent: Monday, October 01, 2007 9:52 AM
      To: The Chevelle Mailing List
      Subject: [Chevelle-list] No Pedal - Poor Braking


      Picked up my 70 Chevelle from the body shop on Thursday and took it for 
its maiden voyage this weekend. Car looks and runs great but won't stop. I have 
absolutely NO pedal. Its not spongy but way to much pedal travel. Hopefully 
someone out there can guide me to a solution. Here is what i am running...

      4 Wheel Drum Brakes - All pads and hardware are brand new
      4 New Brake Cylinders
      New Drum Brake Master Cylinder
      Used GM Power Booster
      Original Proportioning Valve
      All New Lines
      Silicone Brake Fluid

      I adjusted all of the brakes but it did not help. Bled them again but did 
not find any air in the lines. Wondering if I should ditch the booster and put 
the master cylinder back on the firewall as it was before. It is the only thing 
that I changed in the setup.

      Any help would be greatly appreciated. Now that I have it done I want to 
drive!

      Thanks, Dan


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