Yeah, it was depressing, but I move on.
What happened was this. I spent the two weeks building up to the Lake Superior Performance Rally (LSPR) working night and day to get the car ready. The day before I was to leave, I still had a laundry list of things to do, and barely enough time to do them. While bleeding the brakes, I notices the pedal was loose and that one of the nuts on the left side was loose. I was in a hurry and grabbed my impact driver (NOT an impact wrench, I'm not that stupid) and guessed at which nut was loose. Bad idea, bad guess, and the stud snapped off of the brake booster.
I could have run down to the junkyard and pulled a booster, then swapped them, but between the time to drive to the yard, pull a used one, return to my shop, tear out the broken one, install the new one, and start from scratch bleeding the brakes, I was looking at a minimum of 3-4 hours, which I simply didn't have.
So instead I spent the rest of the afternoon swapping new struts into my Outback and drove up and volunteered at the event.
Since I have to start over with the brakes anyhow, I've chosen not to replace the booster. Today FedEx should be dropping off a Wilwood brake pedal box with dual masters and a balance bar. This will eliminate the power brakes entirely and give me separate master cylinders for front and rear, and the ability to dial up any balance between them that I want.
Power brakes are an issue with rally cars, as you only get vacuum when the throttle is closed (or nearly so) and using a left-foot braking technique can involve a lot of brake use without ever lifting off the throttle. For rallycross, that was OK, as I knew I'd lose power assist after the first couple of turns and I was ready for it. On stage, it's a lot more inconsistent, and the speeds are a lot higher, so the stakes are too.
We'll see how much alteration needs to be done to the firewall to mount this stuff. Almost wish I had a hydro clutch transmission so I could use the Wilwood dual pedal setup, which would make the clutch and brake pedal locations consistent.
I also ordered a hydraulic handbrake, since I'll be re-plumbing the entire brake system for the dual masters (and re-routing the lines into the cabin rather than leave them exposed under the car. Fuel lines too).
The handbrake I got was one of the eBay cheapies, which are supposed to be OK except the cheap cylinders on them are famous for not releasing pressure and burning up the rear brakes. I also ordered a Wilwood compact remote master to swap into the handbrake to address that issue.
There's a rallycross near here in a week and a half, that I might take the car out to if I get stuff sorted out. Don't need some of the stuff that isn't done yet to go do that.
What happened was this. I spent the two weeks building up to the Lake Superior Performance Rally (LSPR) working night and day to get the car ready. The day before I was to leave, I still had a laundry list of things to do, and barely enough time to do them. While bleeding the brakes, I notices the pedal was loose and that one of the nuts on the left side was loose. I was in a hurry and grabbed my impact driver (NOT an impact wrench, I'm not that stupid) and guessed at which nut was loose. Bad idea, bad guess, and the stud snapped off of the brake booster.
I could have run down to the junkyard and pulled a booster, then swapped them, but between the time to drive to the yard, pull a used one, return to my shop, tear out the broken one, install the new one, and start from scratch bleeding the brakes, I was looking at a minimum of 3-4 hours, which I simply didn't have.
So instead I spent the rest of the afternoon swapping new struts into my Outback and drove up and volunteered at the event.
Since I have to start over with the brakes anyhow, I've chosen not to replace the booster. Today FedEx should be dropping off a Wilwood brake pedal box with dual masters and a balance bar. This will eliminate the power brakes entirely and give me separate master cylinders for front and rear, and the ability to dial up any balance between them that I want.
Power brakes are an issue with rally cars, as you only get vacuum when the throttle is closed (or nearly so) and using a left-foot braking technique can involve a lot of brake use without ever lifting off the throttle. For rallycross, that was OK, as I knew I'd lose power assist after the first couple of turns and I was ready for it. On stage, it's a lot more inconsistent, and the speeds are a lot higher, so the stakes are too.
We'll see how much alteration needs to be done to the firewall to mount this stuff. Almost wish I had a hydro clutch transmission so I could use the Wilwood dual pedal setup, which would make the clutch and brake pedal locations consistent.
I also ordered a hydraulic handbrake, since I'll be re-plumbing the entire brake system for the dual masters (and re-routing the lines into the cabin rather than leave them exposed under the car. Fuel lines too).
The handbrake I got was one of the eBay cheapies, which are supposed to be OK except the cheap cylinders on them are famous for not releasing pressure and burning up the rear brakes. I also ordered a Wilwood compact remote master to swap into the handbrake to address that issue.
There's a rallycross near here in a week and a half, that I might take the car out to if I get stuff sorted out. Don't need some of the stuff that isn't done yet to go do that.
Last edited by Vector
on 2011-10-19
at 17-49-45.