Anyone know off hand what the front disk brake piston size was on a 68? It looks like a large single piston. I called wildwood about a manual master and he asked about the piston size. I'm not home right now. Anyone know?
The smaller bore will create more line pressure.
Yea, I told him the size and ratio. Those are what he recommended. What year and car one should I look for? I've been reading corvette ones?What brake pedal setup are you running? Hopefully the Wilwood tech asked about pedal ratio and disc size too.... without it, I don't know how they'd guess at the right master cyl.
Stock 67-69 brake pedal with the manual (upper) hole is about 6:1 for manual brakes (or so I've read). With stock front discs and calipers, I don't think I'd go any smaller than 1" bore master cyl. 7/8 would give lower pedal effort, but I think you'd run out of travel with the large 2+15/16" front calipers. 1" might be OK, but might be a little close. I think I'd start with a 1" at least...
-T
your 1 1/8 inch diameter mc is oe equipment size for disc/drum set-up, regardless power or manual.
I know 1" is correct for manual. I'm wondering the difference from 1 1/8" power to 1" manual. Not sure if I'm going to like it.1 1/8" was never used on manual brakes. You will have to stand on the pedal in hopes of getting it to stop. 1" is correct.
Room for twin turbo headers and 3" downpipe.Go with the 1 inch M/C . I tried the 1 1/8 M/C with factory disc and will stop but foot pressure is to high. Noticable difference with 1 inch. Stay away from 7/8 one. IMO Is there a reason going from power to manual?
Thanks David. I hope I'm making the right choice. Like I posted I'm running a 1 1/8" bore master with a 8" dual booster connected to the top hole in the pedal. I just ordered a 67 Corvette Manual 1" bore master. Am I going to have to stand on the pedal to stop this way?I'd do the 1" bore MC.
1" bore was used on the 67 manual disc option with 4 piston calipers, but those calipers had a little less total piston area than the single piston type you have, so your pedal effort should be lower.
David