I installed a quadra-bag system along with a Chuck Algur reaction arm and 6
wheel disc brakes with Cadillac calipers on the rear/rear, for a customer
that lived in the West hills of Portland, Oregon. He drove his coach down
Canyon Blvd every Sunday morning.
After I installed the systems, he complained of a soft pedal and
excessive pedal travel. He brought the coach back to me to check out, as he
thought it should have a firmer pedal. So, I replaced the P-30 m.c. with a
stock one along with a sensitized booster, and installed 80 mm calipers on
stock rotors with sticky yellow ceramic front pads. I re-bled the system,
and returned the coach to him. He called after a couple of weeks, and said
that he thought the pedal should be firmer. I told him to drive it some
more to further break-in the discs and pads.
Some time passed, and no more calls from him. Then, one Sunday morning
while out for his weekly drive, a Honda ran into a center divider after
cutting in front of him without enough clearance, spun out, and came to
rest across both lanes directly in front of him. He said some expletives
and panic stopped his coach, knowing that if he were driving the stock
brakes that he was going to T-bone the Honda on the drivers door. Much to
his suprise, the coach stopped 10 feet short of contact. He pulled over and
called me and thanked me profusely for the disc conversion. So, I know
those systems work, but differently than what we are used to.
Jim Hupy
Salem, Oregon
On Sun, Sep 15, 2019, 3:06 PM Richard Denney via Gmclist <
> After all of yesterday’s second-guessing, I drove the coach home this
> afternoon—about 40 miles. Within five miles, I’d forgotten about the
> brakes. They just work, and I got used to the pedal travel and feel in no
> time. I’ll check on maximum braking when they are really broken in.
>
> Nothing got too hot (though the brakes were hot, which they have to be if
> they are working). If I was having a bearing problem after installing the
> reaction rods, the ends of the spindles would be hot; they weren’t.
>
> But what had me smiling was that the coach drove more nimbly than my
> Expedition. It tracked straight, never needed more than a single light hand
> in the wheel, and didn’t change directions without permission. I am so glad
> not to have wobbly shopping cart caster wheels any more.
>
> Rick “the coach is now Redhead-driveable” Denney
>
>
>
>
> > Both me and the Redhead’s uncle hope so.
> >
> --
> '73 X-Glacier 230 "Jaws"
> Northern Virginia
> Offlist email: rick at rickdenney dot com
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