I have a 92 B13 and I used a 95 Maxima pedal and master cylinder - BUT- I removed the Maxima reservoir and installed the B15 remote mount reservoir instead.
It's a simple swap. just tap out the pin that hold the Maxima reservoir in place with a thin punch, snap the B15 remote fitting in place and push the pin back through. I'm not the first one to do this but the information is buried in other threads.
This is the best way to install a master cylinder on a B13. You're not re-drilling holes like you have to with a b15 master cylinder or fighting for clearance like with a direct mount reservoir.
The Maxima pedal does sit one inch further from the floor (higher) than the B13. I'm used to it but it still looks funky.
I tried to determine pedal height difference by taking a piece of plywood and bolting down a 95 Maxima pedal, a 97 Altima pedal and a 92 Sentra pedal. The Sentra pedal was 9 inches from the board to the pedal and the Maxima and Altima were both 10 inches from board to pedal.
I'd like to see how an Altima looks pedal installed. I'm not sure I'd switch because the Maxima pedal has heavier return springs and a sturdier bracket. I've pulled several Altima pedals in the junk yard that have had cracks in the bracket but I've never seen that problem with a Maxima pedal.
I could have kept things simple and went with a stainless braided line but I wanted to use Nissan parts.
I have a hard line that runs from the master cylinder to a 97 Altima brass distribution block attached to a bracket on the lower part of the the shock tower. Another hard line goes from the distribution block to a 91 Maxima bracket that holds the the hardline to rubber slave cylinder hose connection. I installed the 97 Altima brass air bleed valve to the upper part of the shock tower using the air bleed bracket from the 95 Maxima. All the hard lines are very short and out of the way. I didn't have to drill any holes in the body, everything is attached to factory brackets or holes.
It sounds complicated but it's actually clean and uses Nissan parts to imitates the factory hydraulic clutch set up.
It's a simple swap. just tap out the pin that hold the Maxima reservoir in place with a thin punch, snap the B15 remote fitting in place and push the pin back through. I'm not the first one to do this but the information is buried in other threads.
This is the best way to install a master cylinder on a B13. You're not re-drilling holes like you have to with a b15 master cylinder or fighting for clearance like with a direct mount reservoir.
The Maxima pedal does sit one inch further from the floor (higher) than the B13. I'm used to it but it still looks funky.
I tried to determine pedal height difference by taking a piece of plywood and bolting down a 95 Maxima pedal, a 97 Altima pedal and a 92 Sentra pedal. The Sentra pedal was 9 inches from the board to the pedal and the Maxima and Altima were both 10 inches from board to pedal.
I'd like to see how an Altima looks pedal installed. I'm not sure I'd switch because the Maxima pedal has heavier return springs and a sturdier bracket. I've pulled several Altima pedals in the junk yard that have had cracks in the bracket but I've never seen that problem with a Maxima pedal.
I could have kept things simple and went with a stainless braided line but I wanted to use Nissan parts.
I have a hard line that runs from the master cylinder to a 97 Altima brass distribution block attached to a bracket on the lower part of the the shock tower. Another hard line goes from the distribution block to a 91 Maxima bracket that holds the the hardline to rubber slave cylinder hose connection. I installed the 97 Altima brass air bleed valve to the upper part of the shock tower using the air bleed bracket from the 95 Maxima. All the hard lines are very short and out of the way. I didn't have to drill any holes in the body, everything is attached to factory brackets or holes.
It sounds complicated but it's actually clean and uses Nissan parts to imitates the factory hydraulic clutch set up.