Im guessing yall removed the factory valve on the radiator cross memeber? I was planning on putting mine right back where the factory one was.
I'm planing on taking the valve out and replacing it with hardline to the front and rear. Meaning, hardline from the MC down to where the factory valve is, but replace with a T fitting and out to the fronts. For the rears, hardline to valve, then to electric brake, then all hardline to rear. They will be completely separate of each other.
sound ok?
I'm eliminating the factory prop valve all together. Just running a front line to a T, then to each wheel, and a rear line with the adjustable prop valve, then to a stainless ball valve (for parking brake), then to the rear T, then each wheel.
I'm eliminating the factory prop valve all together. Just running a front line to a T, then to each wheel, and a rear line with the adjustable prop valve, then to a stainless ball valve (for parking brake), then to the rear T, then each wheel.
I like it. Ball valve in middle is for rear, best $25 mod I've ever done. I used an electric for the front so I didn't have to plumb in to cab. It works well to take one line down to front and then split also, no more stretching lines at the wheels.
factory valve is just a tee for front anyways.
and rear is biased/restricted but factory set.
so this mod is perfectly normall.
Similar setup on Claudia's FJ40- except the p-brake. We put the Wilwood valve right at the master in the rear line. In best interwebs fashion, we got to hear that this was going to spontaneously combust/explode/leave your unsuspecting passenger with a tattoo (or however you spell that...) on their left cheek. Best case scenario was that it would simply break, leaving the truck with no brakes, and kill an unsuspecting busload of nuns. None of this has happened in 5 years of trails. Brakes on the '40 work fine. Haven't changed anything after the initial adjustment.
Do you want to adjust f/r brake bias while driving? In that case, a little more plumbing might be in order.
wasn't the load sensing thing in the back? Under the bed, to sense weight, and release more fluid (or pressure) to the rear brakes
never seen one here, heard they were seen more in logging country (oregon) lol
Nope, I'm way too old for this...
Awesome description Michael... So your looking for another way to get a tatoo then right?
. And when I'm riding shotgun in the '40 (as I did for the recent holiday trail rides because my truck was down), I try my best to simply hang on. It's actually a pretty good workout for abs and right arm...
My old room mate's IMCA Modified had a crank on the dash to adjust the brakes bias. It used two separate master cylinders though.
Martin