cheesepocket Posted December 11, 2012 Share Posted December 11, 2012 I never drove my car with the six for comparison, but if I hook the vacuum line from the booster to the factory tube on the LS1 manifold, I get way too much assist, like stepping on a marshmallow and then way too much braking for the effort. Really tough especially to heel-and-toe that way. I tried leaving the vacuum source capped, but then it's alarming in how much effort it takes, and I feel like I'm gonna put my foot through the thin firewall. I tried getting an industrial valve designed to regulate pressure/vacuum, but all that did is allow full boost for maybe 1.5 pumps and then the booster was depleted. In other words it regulated the volume but not the pressure. I have the stock front disc and rear drum setup stock for my 72 240, and don't want to go down the road right now of the full front/rear and master cylinder upgrade, just want to drive the car for awhile. I doubt I can just mount the master right to the firewall and simply delete the booster, but I don't mind manual brakes if it's easy and relatively cheap. I didn't post this in the brakes section as I am hoping for an LS-specific solution that might still allow me to use the booster. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
alrighty Posted December 12, 2012 Share Posted December 12, 2012 Running a sentra booster with strange master cylinder(120$).I'll let you know here in the next few days how it brakes.LS1 with T56 and AZC (4 piston)brakes front and rear is what we are running. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
randy 77zt Posted December 13, 2012 Share Posted December 13, 2012 Any engine makes about 20" of vacuem under closing throttle-it doesnt matter what motor made the vacuem.If you increase the bore size of the master cylinder it will take more effort on the pedal. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
milesz Posted December 17, 2012 Share Posted December 17, 2012 I never drove my car with the six for comparison, but if I hook the vacuum line from the booster to the factory tube on the LS1 manifold, I get way too much assist, like stepping on a marshmallow and then way too much braking for the effort. Really tough especially to heel-and-toe that way. I tried leaving the vacuum source capped, but then it's alarming in how much effort it takes, and I feel like I'm gonna put my foot through the thin firewall. I tried getting an industrial valve designed to regulate pressure/vacuum, but all that did is allow full boost for maybe 1.5 pumps and then the booster was depleted. In other words it regulated the volume but not the pressure. I have the stock front disc and rear drum setup stock for my 72 240, and don't want to go down the road right now of the full front/rear and master cylinder upgrade, just want to drive the car for awhile. I doubt I can just mount the master right to the firewall and simply delete the booster, but I don't mind manual brakes if it's easy and relatively cheap. I didn't post this in the brakes section as I am hoping for an LS-specific solution that might still allow me to use the booster. I am having the same problem. Please let me know how you fixed the problem. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
zdlite Posted December 21, 2012 Share Posted December 21, 2012 classic symptoms of a mis aligned reaction disc. Do a search on that topic and read the write up on how to fix it. I run a stock booster and ZX MC. No issues with the 23" vac at idle. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
1 tuff z Posted December 22, 2012 Share Posted December 22, 2012 I'm running the later zx 15/16" booster and the pedal pressure/feel suits my needs fine. Able to heel/toe and effectively modulate the brakes both on the track & street and the larger booster masks my lack of race car driver smoothness and makes my heel-toe feel like I actually know what I'm doing, thus making [passenger] perception = reality! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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