
Originally Posted by
alien
Ok brains trust I need your help.
I've got a '79 Series3 ex British army air portable(lightweight) that I'm fitting new brakes to.
It's got 10" drums all round with a vacuum assisted duel circuit master cylinder.
The hoses are imperial not metric as expected with a S3, possibly due to parts compatibility with previous MOD delivered S2a's.
The previous owner fitted new brakes to the rear as they where hanging on, it now needs new shoes on one side.
He changed the wheel cylinders but I believe the problem is the flexible hose delaminating.
The front brakes need replacing, leaking wheel cylinders and low contaminated shoes.
This is where I'm stumped.
I fitted new shoes after checking them against the old ones, they look identical excluding lining thickness although marginally narrower.
As I slip the drum on every thing feels good, not tight and the drum rotates freely.
However as I fit the 3 screws to nip the drum up the last 3/16" the drum locks and can't be rotated.
I've chamfered the outer lining edge thinking it was possibly rubbing on the drum.
I've put bearing blue on the outer edge of the linings and there is no contact with the drum so not jamming the linings against the backing plate.
Refitting the old linings eliminates the issue.
This happens on all 4 wheel with the new linings.
Today I fitted the front wheel cylinders and hoses, the shoe issue remains.
Any suggestions as I can't see why it's occurring?
My next idea is to file a little off the leading and trailing ends of the linings to see if it's the cause.
I need to order 2 sets of linings to finish the brake rebuild but want to identify why it's happening first.
TIA, cheers Kyle.
I would love to give you the "correct" answer, Kyle, but all I can tell you is that at a Base Workshop, brake shoes were always "radiused" prior to fitting ( there was a jig expressly for this purpose ). I doubt that this is the recommended practice, but it was done. I never had anything to do with 'lightweights', but I doubt their brakes were different to the standard cars. We could never fit brake shoes without doing this. It was only a few thou".
However, I suppose you have checked that the adjusters are all wound back. Try giving each shoe a tap in towards the axle with a mallet ( not a hammer ) and see if that helps. The old shoes fit because they already did!
JayTee
Nullus Anxietus
Cancer is gender blind.
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