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#1
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#2
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Every time I get in the car to drive it, I have to make one push on the brake pedal to firm the brakes. Not a pump, just one push, as if the shoes are too far from the drum surface. (I've adjusted the brake shoes properly). Is this a symptom of oval drums? |
#3
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"Gordon" <gordon (AT) lgbpcomputing (DOT) co.uk.invalid> wrote in message news:4n7ucaF9363pU1 (AT) individual (DOT) net... Every time I get in the car to drive it, I have to make one push on the brake pedal to firm the brakes. Not a pump, just one push, as if the shoes are too far from the drum surface. (I've adjusted the brake shoes properly). Is this a symptom of oval drums? I doubt it, and if you've adjusted the shoes, any drum ovality should have been obvious. Are you sure you adjusted them correctly? Mike. |
#4
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"Mike G" <metier (AT) lycos (DOT) co.uk> wrote in message news:450ecaa7$0$2654$ed2619ec (AT) ptn-nntp-reader02 (DOT) plus.net... "Gordon" <gordon (AT) lgbpcomputing (DOT) co.uk.invalid> wrote in message news:4n7ucaF9363pU1 (AT) individual (DOT) net... Every time I get in the car to drive it, I have to make one push on the brake pedal to firm the brakes. Not a pump, just one push, as if the shoes are too far from the drum surface. (I've adjusted the brake shoes properly). Is this a symptom of oval drums? I doubt it, and if you've adjusted the shoes, any drum ovality should have been obvious. Are you sure you adjusted them correctly? Mike. Absolutely. You can't really not adjust them correctly. Turn the adjuster (two on each front drum, one on the rear) click by click until the drums lock, then undo one click. That's all there is to it..... |
#5
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Absolutely. You can't really not adjust them correctly. Turn the adjuster (two on each front drum, one on the rear) click by click until the drums lock, then undo one click. That's all there is to it..... In that case, if they still revolve freely, they can't have any significant ovality. Any ovality would also be very obvious through the brake pedal under braking. I think you'll have to look for the answer around the master cylinder. Either with the cylinder seals or the linkage from the pedal to it, which can get very sloppy on MM's |
#6
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I would also check for too much play in the front wheel bearings. If the inner surface of the linings are not exactly parallel with the inside face of the drum because of bearing slack, then the "too tight and loosen a set amount" type of adjustment may not leave the right clearance. It is a long shot, but easier to get to than the MM master cylinder! |
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Also, have you tested to see if there is any difference if you leave the car overnight without the handbrake on? If you only have to pump the brakes if you have used the handbrake, something isn't right in the rear drums. |
#7
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Also, have you tested to see if there is any difference if you leave the car overnight without the handbrake on? If you only have to pump the brakes if you have used the handbrake, something isn't right in the rear drums. I'll try that one....... |
#8
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Every time I get in the car to drive it, I have to make one push on the brake pedal to firm the brakes. Not a pump, just one push, as if the shoes are too far from the drum surface. (I've adjusted the brake shoes properly). |
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Is this a symptom of oval drums? No. |
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