Jump to content
HybridZ

03 Ford Cobra brakes on 73 240Z


Recommended Posts

I recently converted my OEM solid disk front rotor and rear drum brakes to 03 Ford Cobra brakes, 13" fronts and 11.5 " rear, with a proportion valve in the cab. Also I gutted both OEM bias proporting valves to make as a pass through one located on the firewall and another located near the driverside rail near the shock tower. I've noticed on later z's that only one bias valve were installed from the factory compared to what I have on my z. In anycase I'm expericing a bad spungy brake pedal and have to pump the brakes in order to build pressure. Any ideas would be greatly appreciated.

P7140009_thumb.JPG

P7140010_thumb.JPG

P7140011_thumb.JPG

P7140012_thumb.JPG

P8160013_thumb.JPG

P8160014_thumb.JPG

P8160015_thumb.JPG

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not trying to be mean here, but you really should take the time to understand what these parts do before you start messing with them, especially when it comes to brakes. First of all, those two parts you gutted are not both proportioning valves. Only the one on the firewall is. The one on the shock tower is a brake pressure warning switch that warns you if there is a pressure loss to the front or rear brakes. So, by gutting it, you've just disabled that safety feature.

 

Secondly, by gutting both, you've effectively tied the front and rear brakes lines together at two points (nether should be), bypassing another safety feature. The front and rear lines are kept separate so that a failure at one end will still allow you to have brakes at the other.

 

You need to reassemble the warning switch and as for the proportioning valve (on the firewall), it should be removed and the gap in the lines should be spliced together. The proportioning valve uses pressure to the front right caliper to regulate pressure to the rear brakes lines, so that's how you tied the lines together there.

 

This may not necessarily explain your spongy pedal, but you should definitely address these mistakes first.

 

Nigel

'73 240ZT

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Correct, Terry and Nigel. Joe and I've been communicating via email and things are sometimes tough to understand on both ends... The thing is, Joe didn't want to replace all the lines and tie the front circuit together and the back circuit together, voiding both the factory bias valve and the safety switch.

 

My recommendation is to get rid of all of the parts associated with "safety" and "bias" from nissan and close off the front and rear circuits from each other... Run the Bias valve off the rear line from the master, and you'll be good to go.

 

As I said in my email, Joe, I've got some unions in metric sizes you can have to make those connections to isolate the rear from the front, and just do away with them...

 

Also, What Terry said is right... One not per topic in the right category...

 

Mike

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Okay thanks for the replies. I do apologize for the the multiple posting, was experiecing server problem with uploading the pictures and for some reason or another was able to post the pics via this catagory, which turned out to be the third try. I'm new to this forum so please work with me and I will remove the other related threads just having a little difficulty doing so, some direction would be greatly appreciated. As for the bias valve located on the firewall will be removed and lines will be tied in properly and will work on the safty pressure warning switch will most likely remove that too. Thanks again.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Joe, I deleted them for you... Give me a ring tomorrow and we'll go over what I think you can do to eliminate the issue all together.

 

This is a real easy fix... You'll be driving the car in two hours, max.

Mike

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Very happy to report that we've got Joe's car squared away and his cobra brakes are sorted/ no longer leaking, and all OEM bias/brake switches have been removed from the system.

 

BIG grin on his face after the test drive today!

 

Mike

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I recently converted my OEM solid disk front rotor and rear drum brakes to 03 Ford Cobra brakes, 13" fronts and 11.5 " rear, with a proportion valve in the cab. Also I gutted both OEM bias proporting valves to make as a pass through one located on the firewall and another located near the driverside rail near the shock tower. I've noticed on later z's that only one bias valve were installed from the factory compared to what I have on my z. In anycase I'm expericing a bad spungy brake pedal and have to pump the brakes in order to build pressure. Any ideas would be greatly appreciated.

 

Very happy to report that we've got Joe's car squared away and his cobra brakes are sorted/ no longer leaking, and all OEM bias/brake switches have been removed from the system.

 

Joe, so based on what you posted and what Mike posted, the system is as it was, only minus the OEM bias switches. You guys just bypassed or removed them? Nice work in getting that sorted so quickly.

 

Davy

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This system realy works well if you remember you'll need to remove the OEM bias and pressure switches and install Ts and unions, along with a manual bias adjuster.

 

I personally think this system is better, and certainly more cost effective, with a functioning E-brake, than the Wilwood setups being sold by others... And the OEM mustang cobra rotor setup sold by most of the popular race car suppliers will be a direct bolt on!

 

Mike

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Cameron, I shouldn't have said "direct bolt on"... You need to have adapters made for the calipers in the front and buy the early 79-81ZX caliper bracket for the rear and then drill it out to fit the Mustang Caliper. Once you've gone thru all the "hoops" of sourcing the caliper adapters, and proper hub for the front (Jamie Taylor had a run of them made, but they're out of production now, but Ross may have them) You can then just run all the Ford SVT Cobra stuff from 1999-2003.

 

If you can track down all the parts, it's well worth it... Or just buy the kit from Baja... I fully believe that the OEM Mustang brake setup (it's a five lug deal) is the best way to go for these relatively light weight cars, and the OEM form parts source makes daily driver parts a snap.

 

I don't think these will fit the 15 inch wheel. The front rotor is a 13inch rotor. I'm not even sure you could squeeze a 16 inch rotor on it.

 

Mike

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...