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Dennis has some pictures of his completed job about ten entries above this. That is exactly what was done to a few of our members cars during tech days when existing lines were used.
as Roger stated, the best route is all new lines, this coupler idea is a close second.
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Darn...mine is "almost" done, but you know how that goes. Hopefully I can test it this weekend or next, but I don't want to publish any pics until then. Looks really nice though! (Thanks to Larry and Roger and Jeff and Kenny...[BOW][BOW][BOW][BOW])
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Here are some pics of my dual master install... believe it or not does fit.
It's all bled and nothing leaks...but I still need to adjust the brakes, clutch, and tranny linkage before I can take it for a test drive.
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Nice job bending and looping those lines! Looks like a clean install.
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Mostly due to Larry and Roger for sure...but I did redo a bend or two to get it all to line up with the clips[yay]
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This photo was sent to me by a friend that was at Hot August Nights in Reno. Is this some sort of quad master cylinder or am I missing something? Not sure exactly what I am looking at.
I am guessing it is in a 63 convertible by the toy on the air cleaner.
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Could be a dual MC and a dual hydraulic clutch? But why would you need a dual clutch assembly?? Interesting. :confused:
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Really looks like 4 dual masters, but it's not really clear. I guess he figured that with all the restrictions he had with shock towers he'd capitalize on the available space without those and just go crazy, uh, I mean, rationally exuberant. Or maybe he's an engineer at Boeing and he's built in multiple redundancy.
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Brake Balance?
Another idea is that he might have a balance bar to adjust front-to-rear brake bias. A fairly typical race car setup uses two master cylinders, side by side, and a horizontal bar which activates both. One MC is for front brakes, the other for rear. The front-to-rear balance can then be adjusted by revising where the brake pedal presses on the bar.