Oh, Crap....
Do I see rubber lines running the length of the axle tubes?
If so, is there anyone else here that has that? If there is anyone else with that setup and good brakes, I'll change my mind, but there is no way I would run that.
You are dealing with two factors with brakes. Force and volume. Rubber defeats both.
Stainless steel, teflon lined, high dollar brake lines still stretch. There is a reason that 90% of all the brake lines on a vehicle are steel or some metal. And its not because they might rot.
When you first started talking about soft pedal to a point, then hard, I thought that you were bottoming out the MC.
But, then you said that the pedal would hit the floor when bleeding, so that eliminated that.
Instead, I think you are bottoming out the booster, and the hard pedal you feel is the actual load of the master cylinder with no boost.
Which tells me that you do not have enough volume in you system to work the brakes.
That fluid has got to be going somewhere. First thing to check, is pad position. Chock the wheels, ALWAYS chock the wheels. Then hit the brakes like you are doing a normal stop. Press good and hard.
Release them like you are going to drive off. Leave everything alone, and slide under and check the distance from the pad to the rotor on each wheel. The pad should be from touching to about the thickness of a piece of paper. If one or more is a 1/4 inch or so back, that has to be fixed.
I do NOT think you are going to find that though.
Instead, I think all of them are going to be fine. If so, I'm betting on rubber problems.
Oh man, I just went back and looked. Sure enough, you even have some rubber hoses from the MC to the Prop valve.
Dude, you cannot have that much expansion ability in a brake system unless you run massive dia. MCs.
And, if you do that, you will have to go to hydro because you will not have enough pressure ratio to stop.
I'm betting you could clip the plastic ties that are holding the rear flex lines to the axle tubes, stomp on the brakes, and the lines will jump like a shocked frog leg.
If Chris is still there, he could pinch the lines between his fingers, and I bet he would feel some expansion when you hit the brakes hard.
You need to either find some factory hard lines, or make some up for the rear, plus find some of the coils from the MC to the valve.
You might get away with either the ones at the MC, or the ones at the rear, but those together combined with the regular ones from the frame to the rear axle, frame to the front axle, plus the ones at the front calipers are just too much expansion.
When you are pressing the pedal, all your pressure is going to expand those lines. Each one is only expanding a tiny amount per inch, but there are a lot of inches.