With the bigger brakes on my truck since I went to the 3/4 ton swap, I can stop on a dime and give you a nickels change.... and thats with 37s. No comparison to when I had the 10 bolts and 35s.
Then put an adjustable proportioning valve on it.
Martin



With the bigger brakes on my truck since I went to the 3/4 ton swap, I can stop on a dime and give you a nickels change.... and thats with 37s. No comparison to when I had the 10 bolts and 35s.

Going to a bigger piston caliper in the front would help if you also went up to the bigger master cylinder as well. Its' been a while but I believe the 3/4 ton master cylinder with the larger rear brakes has a larger master cylinder as well, but more so for the front larger piston calipers.

I'm thinking that the calipers take more fluid for movement than wheel cylinders do, so proportionally they are different (why there are different reservoirs as well)
going to a larger caliper in front would seemingly REQUIRE a larger M/C to feed those larger bore calipers.


But...if If I have a small MC, a small SC in the front, and a large SC in the rear, wouldn't I have soft rear brakes and normal front ones?
This is what has been bugging me for the last couple of weeks.![]()
What I had said was the wheel cylinder in the rear probably changed very little. Without looking at the two side by side, I can't say that with absolute certainty. If my memory serves me correctly there isn't much difference if any. So, the reason your rears now lock up early is because of the increased braking surface. Your hydraulic system is the same, you simply made the friction surface larger. Now the rears lock up earlier than the fronts.
Master cylinders can change flow to the front or rear independently of one another.

But in addition to increasing the area in the rear, I also increased the diameter of the disc in the front. I have been assuming that they would match up. I guess not.
But I still can't understand how changing the calipers is supposed to change this.![]()
The front brake calipers (still 1/2-ton) have been replaced, and the rear 11" drums have been swapped for the 13" drums on the 14bff. That caused no issues last summer when it was loaded down. But now that it's unloaded the rear end is locking up too early. Today I was driving through a torrential downpour and it was quite noticeable on the slick streets. I hardly ever drive it in inclement weather (this is probably the first time), but the issue is at least on the radar screen now. Might just be a matter of loosening the adjustment screw in the rear, but I'm guessing that the larger shoe area is throwing off the proportion some.
Anybody have any insight?
What did you do to the fronts? Apparently I missed that.
You didn't say anything here about changes to the front.
Switched from 1/2-ton to 3/4-ton rotors & discs. Not much difference. Just enough to be annoying. I assumed there had to be some technical gain to having the slightly larger rotor, or they wouldn't have bothered stocking 2 parts of such similar dimension with different backing plates.
Hoses and calipers were replaced with new 1/2-ton hardware.
rotors and discs are the same thing.
Ugh. Wrong word choice (I meant hubs). Apologies.Nothing you have changed in the front has made any difference in the front. If the rotors are a different diameter, I don't think they are, it doesn't matter. Your pads are the same. Therefore the available friction surface is still the same.

As far as I know they are rigidly connected but the bores aren't necessarily the same for the front and rear pistons.

I'll get it figured out eventually.