installing power brakes on a cj?
#11
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: installing power brakes on a cj?
Same experience here. Plus I've found myself in a number of
situations in my Bronco, with a dead engine, wondering weather I should
let up on the brakes to start a down hill decent, knowing that every
time I release, I use half the storage vacuum, and at six times there
will be NO brakes. Remember that Dodge wagon coming off a hill without
brakes, in terrain much like the Moab sandstone.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Mike Romain wrote:
>
> No, the master is totally different for power brakes.
>
> There also are two varieties on top of that, one is for front disks, the
> other is for drum fronts.
>
> A 'proper' power brake master for a CJ7 isn't expensive at all. He will
> also need the proper proportioning or combination valve for it.
>
> On that note, I have had the chance to compare an 85 with manual brakes
> and my 86 with power brakes and the 85 stops a bunch faster than my 86.
> The owner of the 85 decided not to bother going to power after he saw
> the lack of improvement or an actual downgrade in performance.
>
> Mike
> 86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> 88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
situations in my Bronco, with a dead engine, wondering weather I should
let up on the brakes to start a down hill decent, knowing that every
time I release, I use half the storage vacuum, and at six times there
will be NO brakes. Remember that Dodge wagon coming off a hill without
brakes, in terrain much like the Moab sandstone.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Mike Romain wrote:
>
> No, the master is totally different for power brakes.
>
> There also are two varieties on top of that, one is for front disks, the
> other is for drum fronts.
>
> A 'proper' power brake master for a CJ7 isn't expensive at all. He will
> also need the proper proportioning or combination valve for it.
>
> On that note, I have had the chance to compare an 85 with manual brakes
> and my 86 with power brakes and the 85 stops a bunch faster than my 86.
> The owner of the 85 decided not to bother going to power after he saw
> the lack of improvement or an actual downgrade in performance.
>
> Mike
> 86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> 88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
#12
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: installing power brakes on a cj?
Same experience here. Plus I've found myself in a number of
situations in my Bronco, with a dead engine, wondering weather I should
let up on the brakes to start a down hill decent, knowing that every
time I release, I use half the storage vacuum, and at six times there
will be NO brakes. Remember that Dodge wagon coming off a hill without
brakes, in terrain much like the Moab sandstone.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Mike Romain wrote:
>
> No, the master is totally different for power brakes.
>
> There also are two varieties on top of that, one is for front disks, the
> other is for drum fronts.
>
> A 'proper' power brake master for a CJ7 isn't expensive at all. He will
> also need the proper proportioning or combination valve for it.
>
> On that note, I have had the chance to compare an 85 with manual brakes
> and my 86 with power brakes and the 85 stops a bunch faster than my 86.
> The owner of the 85 decided not to bother going to power after he saw
> the lack of improvement or an actual downgrade in performance.
>
> Mike
> 86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> 88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
situations in my Bronco, with a dead engine, wondering weather I should
let up on the brakes to start a down hill decent, knowing that every
time I release, I use half the storage vacuum, and at six times there
will be NO brakes. Remember that Dodge wagon coming off a hill without
brakes, in terrain much like the Moab sandstone.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Mike Romain wrote:
>
> No, the master is totally different for power brakes.
>
> There also are two varieties on top of that, one is for front disks, the
> other is for drum fronts.
>
> A 'proper' power brake master for a CJ7 isn't expensive at all. He will
> also need the proper proportioning or combination valve for it.
>
> On that note, I have had the chance to compare an 85 with manual brakes
> and my 86 with power brakes and the 85 stops a bunch faster than my 86.
> The owner of the 85 decided not to bother going to power after he saw
> the lack of improvement or an actual downgrade in performance.
>
> Mike
> 86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> 88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
#13
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: installing power brakes on a cj?
Same experience here. Plus I've found myself in a number of
situations in my Bronco, with a dead engine, wondering weather I should
let up on the brakes to start a down hill decent, knowing that every
time I release, I use half the storage vacuum, and at six times there
will be NO brakes. Remember that Dodge wagon coming off a hill without
brakes, in terrain much like the Moab sandstone.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Mike Romain wrote:
>
> No, the master is totally different for power brakes.
>
> There also are two varieties on top of that, one is for front disks, the
> other is for drum fronts.
>
> A 'proper' power brake master for a CJ7 isn't expensive at all. He will
> also need the proper proportioning or combination valve for it.
>
> On that note, I have had the chance to compare an 85 with manual brakes
> and my 86 with power brakes and the 85 stops a bunch faster than my 86.
> The owner of the 85 decided not to bother going to power after he saw
> the lack of improvement or an actual downgrade in performance.
>
> Mike
> 86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> 88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
situations in my Bronco, with a dead engine, wondering weather I should
let up on the brakes to start a down hill decent, knowing that every
time I release, I use half the storage vacuum, and at six times there
will be NO brakes. Remember that Dodge wagon coming off a hill without
brakes, in terrain much like the Moab sandstone.
God Bless America, ßill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Mike Romain wrote:
>
> No, the master is totally different for power brakes.
>
> There also are two varieties on top of that, one is for front disks, the
> other is for drum fronts.
>
> A 'proper' power brake master for a CJ7 isn't expensive at all. He will
> also need the proper proportioning or combination valve for it.
>
> On that note, I have had the chance to compare an 85 with manual brakes
> and my 86 with power brakes and the 85 stops a bunch faster than my 86.
> The owner of the 85 decided not to bother going to power after he saw
> the lack of improvement or an actual downgrade in performance.
>
> Mike
> 86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> 88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
#14
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: installing power brakes on a cj?
no Lee I have not made funeral arraignments. but I do live on the top of a
hill from a school and when I work on my jeep I like to drink allot of beer
and oh yea my emergency brake cables are rusted and don't work, you know
those old jeeps. and my jeep has a supercharger 454 in it so I always have
the throttle wide open so I don't use brakes that much. but I hope
everything will be o.k.
but seriously I called the guy who sold me the booster and he said it is
off of a 94 wrangler with a 4 liter 6 cyl. I would think that if I keep the
same master cylinder and proportioning valve that the front to back
difference in pressure would stay the same and I would be increasing the
pressure with the booster. just because they changed the part don't mean it
wont work maybe they were just looking for a different pedal pressure. has
anyone done a CJ to wrangler brake conversion? thanks carmine
"Lee Ayrton" <layrton@ntplx.net> wrote in message
news:Pine.GSO.4.43.0312051155370.13615-100000@sea.ntplx.net...
> On or about Thu, 4 Dec 2003, Jet of jet@bestweb.net wrote:
>
> > I bought a vacuum booster and a master cylinder of a wrangler on ebay
and
> > will be installing it on my 86 cj7 this weekend.
>
> Have you made reservations for your funeral on Tuesday?
>
>
> > my jeep has front disks and back drum brakes with a proportioning valve
> > mounted to the frame. I noticed that the wrangler master cylinder has
> > the brake lines coming out of the opposite side is this a problem? can I
> > unbolt the wrangler master cylinder and bolt my CJ master cylinder on
> > and not have to bleed the brakes? or do I have to use the master
> > cylinder and booster as a set? where should I hook up the vacuum line
> > to? anything else anyone can think of that I should do or should'nt do?
> > thanks carmine
>
> I think you might be in for some trouble making it fit, and the brake
> lines are sending you an important message.
>
> Looking quickly in a mail order catalogue, I notice that the parts numbers
> for the 78-86 power master cylinder are not the same as the master for
> the 87-89 YJ, the 90-94 (without ABS) or the 95 YJ (with or w/o ABS).
> All different, as are the proportioning valves for 82-86 and 87-93. Even
> if you can physically make it fit (remember the sheet metal redesign at
> the end of the CJ run -- did they change pedal assemblies too?), you still
> should want to know if they are hydraulically equal. Looking again, the
> front calipers fit 82 through 89, then change for 90 through 00, the rear
> cylinders fit 76 through 89.
>
> Call me a yellow-livered milktoast mamma's boy chicken corporate
> ***-sucker if you like, but I wouldn't mess around with brakes unless I
> knew for sure I was doing the right thing. The "right thing" in this case
> would be getting the right master and booster for my Jeep instead of
> trying to cobble something up from bits and pieces. You're not going to
> feel too good about it if the first time you panic-stab the brakes you
> lock the front wheels, skid and kill someone other than yourself.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
hill from a school and when I work on my jeep I like to drink allot of beer
and oh yea my emergency brake cables are rusted and don't work, you know
those old jeeps. and my jeep has a supercharger 454 in it so I always have
the throttle wide open so I don't use brakes that much. but I hope
everything will be o.k.
but seriously I called the guy who sold me the booster and he said it is
off of a 94 wrangler with a 4 liter 6 cyl. I would think that if I keep the
same master cylinder and proportioning valve that the front to back
difference in pressure would stay the same and I would be increasing the
pressure with the booster. just because they changed the part don't mean it
wont work maybe they were just looking for a different pedal pressure. has
anyone done a CJ to wrangler brake conversion? thanks carmine
"Lee Ayrton" <layrton@ntplx.net> wrote in message
news:Pine.GSO.4.43.0312051155370.13615-100000@sea.ntplx.net...
> On or about Thu, 4 Dec 2003, Jet of jet@bestweb.net wrote:
>
> > I bought a vacuum booster and a master cylinder of a wrangler on ebay
and
> > will be installing it on my 86 cj7 this weekend.
>
> Have you made reservations for your funeral on Tuesday?
>
>
> > my jeep has front disks and back drum brakes with a proportioning valve
> > mounted to the frame. I noticed that the wrangler master cylinder has
> > the brake lines coming out of the opposite side is this a problem? can I
> > unbolt the wrangler master cylinder and bolt my CJ master cylinder on
> > and not have to bleed the brakes? or do I have to use the master
> > cylinder and booster as a set? where should I hook up the vacuum line
> > to? anything else anyone can think of that I should do or should'nt do?
> > thanks carmine
>
> I think you might be in for some trouble making it fit, and the brake
> lines are sending you an important message.
>
> Looking quickly in a mail order catalogue, I notice that the parts numbers
> for the 78-86 power master cylinder are not the same as the master for
> the 87-89 YJ, the 90-94 (without ABS) or the 95 YJ (with or w/o ABS).
> All different, as are the proportioning valves for 82-86 and 87-93. Even
> if you can physically make it fit (remember the sheet metal redesign at
> the end of the CJ run -- did they change pedal assemblies too?), you still
> should want to know if they are hydraulically equal. Looking again, the
> front calipers fit 82 through 89, then change for 90 through 00, the rear
> cylinders fit 76 through 89.
>
> Call me a yellow-livered milktoast mamma's boy chicken corporate
> ***-sucker if you like, but I wouldn't mess around with brakes unless I
> knew for sure I was doing the right thing. The "right thing" in this case
> would be getting the right master and booster for my Jeep instead of
> trying to cobble something up from bits and pieces. You're not going to
> feel too good about it if the first time you panic-stab the brakes you
> lock the front wheels, skid and kill someone other than yourself.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
#15
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: installing power brakes on a cj?
no Lee I have not made funeral arraignments. but I do live on the top of a
hill from a school and when I work on my jeep I like to drink allot of beer
and oh yea my emergency brake cables are rusted and don't work, you know
those old jeeps. and my jeep has a supercharger 454 in it so I always have
the throttle wide open so I don't use brakes that much. but I hope
everything will be o.k.
but seriously I called the guy who sold me the booster and he said it is
off of a 94 wrangler with a 4 liter 6 cyl. I would think that if I keep the
same master cylinder and proportioning valve that the front to back
difference in pressure would stay the same and I would be increasing the
pressure with the booster. just because they changed the part don't mean it
wont work maybe they were just looking for a different pedal pressure. has
anyone done a CJ to wrangler brake conversion? thanks carmine
"Lee Ayrton" <layrton@ntplx.net> wrote in message
news:Pine.GSO.4.43.0312051155370.13615-100000@sea.ntplx.net...
> On or about Thu, 4 Dec 2003, Jet of jet@bestweb.net wrote:
>
> > I bought a vacuum booster and a master cylinder of a wrangler on ebay
and
> > will be installing it on my 86 cj7 this weekend.
>
> Have you made reservations for your funeral on Tuesday?
>
>
> > my jeep has front disks and back drum brakes with a proportioning valve
> > mounted to the frame. I noticed that the wrangler master cylinder has
> > the brake lines coming out of the opposite side is this a problem? can I
> > unbolt the wrangler master cylinder and bolt my CJ master cylinder on
> > and not have to bleed the brakes? or do I have to use the master
> > cylinder and booster as a set? where should I hook up the vacuum line
> > to? anything else anyone can think of that I should do or should'nt do?
> > thanks carmine
>
> I think you might be in for some trouble making it fit, and the brake
> lines are sending you an important message.
>
> Looking quickly in a mail order catalogue, I notice that the parts numbers
> for the 78-86 power master cylinder are not the same as the master for
> the 87-89 YJ, the 90-94 (without ABS) or the 95 YJ (with or w/o ABS).
> All different, as are the proportioning valves for 82-86 and 87-93. Even
> if you can physically make it fit (remember the sheet metal redesign at
> the end of the CJ run -- did they change pedal assemblies too?), you still
> should want to know if they are hydraulically equal. Looking again, the
> front calipers fit 82 through 89, then change for 90 through 00, the rear
> cylinders fit 76 through 89.
>
> Call me a yellow-livered milktoast mamma's boy chicken corporate
> ***-sucker if you like, but I wouldn't mess around with brakes unless I
> knew for sure I was doing the right thing. The "right thing" in this case
> would be getting the right master and booster for my Jeep instead of
> trying to cobble something up from bits and pieces. You're not going to
> feel too good about it if the first time you panic-stab the brakes you
> lock the front wheels, skid and kill someone other than yourself.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
hill from a school and when I work on my jeep I like to drink allot of beer
and oh yea my emergency brake cables are rusted and don't work, you know
those old jeeps. and my jeep has a supercharger 454 in it so I always have
the throttle wide open so I don't use brakes that much. but I hope
everything will be o.k.
but seriously I called the guy who sold me the booster and he said it is
off of a 94 wrangler with a 4 liter 6 cyl. I would think that if I keep the
same master cylinder and proportioning valve that the front to back
difference in pressure would stay the same and I would be increasing the
pressure with the booster. just because they changed the part don't mean it
wont work maybe they were just looking for a different pedal pressure. has
anyone done a CJ to wrangler brake conversion? thanks carmine
"Lee Ayrton" <layrton@ntplx.net> wrote in message
news:Pine.GSO.4.43.0312051155370.13615-100000@sea.ntplx.net...
> On or about Thu, 4 Dec 2003, Jet of jet@bestweb.net wrote:
>
> > I bought a vacuum booster and a master cylinder of a wrangler on ebay
and
> > will be installing it on my 86 cj7 this weekend.
>
> Have you made reservations for your funeral on Tuesday?
>
>
> > my jeep has front disks and back drum brakes with a proportioning valve
> > mounted to the frame. I noticed that the wrangler master cylinder has
> > the brake lines coming out of the opposite side is this a problem? can I
> > unbolt the wrangler master cylinder and bolt my CJ master cylinder on
> > and not have to bleed the brakes? or do I have to use the master
> > cylinder and booster as a set? where should I hook up the vacuum line
> > to? anything else anyone can think of that I should do or should'nt do?
> > thanks carmine
>
> I think you might be in for some trouble making it fit, and the brake
> lines are sending you an important message.
>
> Looking quickly in a mail order catalogue, I notice that the parts numbers
> for the 78-86 power master cylinder are not the same as the master for
> the 87-89 YJ, the 90-94 (without ABS) or the 95 YJ (with or w/o ABS).
> All different, as are the proportioning valves for 82-86 and 87-93. Even
> if you can physically make it fit (remember the sheet metal redesign at
> the end of the CJ run -- did they change pedal assemblies too?), you still
> should want to know if they are hydraulically equal. Looking again, the
> front calipers fit 82 through 89, then change for 90 through 00, the rear
> cylinders fit 76 through 89.
>
> Call me a yellow-livered milktoast mamma's boy chicken corporate
> ***-sucker if you like, but I wouldn't mess around with brakes unless I
> knew for sure I was doing the right thing. The "right thing" in this case
> would be getting the right master and booster for my Jeep instead of
> trying to cobble something up from bits and pieces. You're not going to
> feel too good about it if the first time you panic-stab the brakes you
> lock the front wheels, skid and kill someone other than yourself.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
#16
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: installing power brakes on a cj?
no Lee I have not made funeral arraignments. but I do live on the top of a
hill from a school and when I work on my jeep I like to drink allot of beer
and oh yea my emergency brake cables are rusted and don't work, you know
those old jeeps. and my jeep has a supercharger 454 in it so I always have
the throttle wide open so I don't use brakes that much. but I hope
everything will be o.k.
but seriously I called the guy who sold me the booster and he said it is
off of a 94 wrangler with a 4 liter 6 cyl. I would think that if I keep the
same master cylinder and proportioning valve that the front to back
difference in pressure would stay the same and I would be increasing the
pressure with the booster. just because they changed the part don't mean it
wont work maybe they were just looking for a different pedal pressure. has
anyone done a CJ to wrangler brake conversion? thanks carmine
"Lee Ayrton" <layrton@ntplx.net> wrote in message
news:Pine.GSO.4.43.0312051155370.13615-100000@sea.ntplx.net...
> On or about Thu, 4 Dec 2003, Jet of jet@bestweb.net wrote:
>
> > I bought a vacuum booster and a master cylinder of a wrangler on ebay
and
> > will be installing it on my 86 cj7 this weekend.
>
> Have you made reservations for your funeral on Tuesday?
>
>
> > my jeep has front disks and back drum brakes with a proportioning valve
> > mounted to the frame. I noticed that the wrangler master cylinder has
> > the brake lines coming out of the opposite side is this a problem? can I
> > unbolt the wrangler master cylinder and bolt my CJ master cylinder on
> > and not have to bleed the brakes? or do I have to use the master
> > cylinder and booster as a set? where should I hook up the vacuum line
> > to? anything else anyone can think of that I should do or should'nt do?
> > thanks carmine
>
> I think you might be in for some trouble making it fit, and the brake
> lines are sending you an important message.
>
> Looking quickly in a mail order catalogue, I notice that the parts numbers
> for the 78-86 power master cylinder are not the same as the master for
> the 87-89 YJ, the 90-94 (without ABS) or the 95 YJ (with or w/o ABS).
> All different, as are the proportioning valves for 82-86 and 87-93. Even
> if you can physically make it fit (remember the sheet metal redesign at
> the end of the CJ run -- did they change pedal assemblies too?), you still
> should want to know if they are hydraulically equal. Looking again, the
> front calipers fit 82 through 89, then change for 90 through 00, the rear
> cylinders fit 76 through 89.
>
> Call me a yellow-livered milktoast mamma's boy chicken corporate
> ***-sucker if you like, but I wouldn't mess around with brakes unless I
> knew for sure I was doing the right thing. The "right thing" in this case
> would be getting the right master and booster for my Jeep instead of
> trying to cobble something up from bits and pieces. You're not going to
> feel too good about it if the first time you panic-stab the brakes you
> lock the front wheels, skid and kill someone other than yourself.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
hill from a school and when I work on my jeep I like to drink allot of beer
and oh yea my emergency brake cables are rusted and don't work, you know
those old jeeps. and my jeep has a supercharger 454 in it so I always have
the throttle wide open so I don't use brakes that much. but I hope
everything will be o.k.
but seriously I called the guy who sold me the booster and he said it is
off of a 94 wrangler with a 4 liter 6 cyl. I would think that if I keep the
same master cylinder and proportioning valve that the front to back
difference in pressure would stay the same and I would be increasing the
pressure with the booster. just because they changed the part don't mean it
wont work maybe they were just looking for a different pedal pressure. has
anyone done a CJ to wrangler brake conversion? thanks carmine
"Lee Ayrton" <layrton@ntplx.net> wrote in message
news:Pine.GSO.4.43.0312051155370.13615-100000@sea.ntplx.net...
> On or about Thu, 4 Dec 2003, Jet of jet@bestweb.net wrote:
>
> > I bought a vacuum booster and a master cylinder of a wrangler on ebay
and
> > will be installing it on my 86 cj7 this weekend.
>
> Have you made reservations for your funeral on Tuesday?
>
>
> > my jeep has front disks and back drum brakes with a proportioning valve
> > mounted to the frame. I noticed that the wrangler master cylinder has
> > the brake lines coming out of the opposite side is this a problem? can I
> > unbolt the wrangler master cylinder and bolt my CJ master cylinder on
> > and not have to bleed the brakes? or do I have to use the master
> > cylinder and booster as a set? where should I hook up the vacuum line
> > to? anything else anyone can think of that I should do or should'nt do?
> > thanks carmine
>
> I think you might be in for some trouble making it fit, and the brake
> lines are sending you an important message.
>
> Looking quickly in a mail order catalogue, I notice that the parts numbers
> for the 78-86 power master cylinder are not the same as the master for
> the 87-89 YJ, the 90-94 (without ABS) or the 95 YJ (with or w/o ABS).
> All different, as are the proportioning valves for 82-86 and 87-93. Even
> if you can physically make it fit (remember the sheet metal redesign at
> the end of the CJ run -- did they change pedal assemblies too?), you still
> should want to know if they are hydraulically equal. Looking again, the
> front calipers fit 82 through 89, then change for 90 through 00, the rear
> cylinders fit 76 through 89.
>
> Call me a yellow-livered milktoast mamma's boy chicken corporate
> ***-sucker if you like, but I wouldn't mess around with brakes unless I
> knew for sure I was doing the right thing. The "right thing" in this case
> would be getting the right master and booster for my Jeep instead of
> trying to cobble something up from bits and pieces. You're not going to
> feel too good about it if the first time you panic-stab the brakes you
> lock the front wheels, skid and kill someone other than yourself.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
#17
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: installing power brakes on a cj?
In 91, the AMC designed Jeep disappeared.
Chrysler took them over and changed a whole mess of stuff including the
brakes.
They changed the calipers, the master, the combination valve, etc....
A 94 master will 'NOT' work on a CJ7, period.
I just called my local parts store and asked them the price for an 86
CJ7's power brake master cylinder.
It costs $53.00 minus a $15.00 rebate for the old one.
$38.00!!!!!!!!!!! In Canadian dollars even.....
I for one sure the hell won't risk my life over forty bucks!
Buy the right parts please.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
Jet wrote:
>
> no Lee I have not made funeral arraignments. but I do live on the top of a
> hill from a school and when I work on my jeep I like to drink allot of beer
> and oh yea my emergency brake cables are rusted and don't work, you know
> those old jeeps. and my jeep has a supercharger 454 in it so I always have
> the throttle wide open so I don't use brakes that much. but I hope
> everything will be o.k.
> but seriously I called the guy who sold me the booster and he said it is
> off of a 94 wrangler with a 4 liter 6 cyl. I would think that if I keep the
> same master cylinder and proportioning valve that the front to back
> difference in pressure would stay the same and I would be increasing the
> pressure with the booster. just because they changed the part don't mean it
> wont work maybe they were just looking for a different pedal pressure. has
> anyone done a CJ to wrangler brake conversion? thanks carmine
>
> "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@ntplx.net> wrote in message
> news:Pine.GSO.4.43.0312051155370.13615-100000@sea.ntplx.net...
> > On or about Thu, 4 Dec 2003, Jet of jet@bestweb.net wrote:
> >
> > > I bought a vacuum booster and a master cylinder of a wrangler on ebay
> and
> > > will be installing it on my 86 cj7 this weekend.
> >
> > Have you made reservations for your funeral on Tuesday?
> >
> >
> > > my jeep has front disks and back drum brakes with a proportioning valve
> > > mounted to the frame. I noticed that the wrangler master cylinder has
> > > the brake lines coming out of the opposite side is this a problem? can I
> > > unbolt the wrangler master cylinder and bolt my CJ master cylinder on
> > > and not have to bleed the brakes? or do I have to use the master
> > > cylinder and booster as a set? where should I hook up the vacuum line
> > > to? anything else anyone can think of that I should do or should'nt do?
> > > thanks carmine
> >
> > I think you might be in for some trouble making it fit, and the brake
> > lines are sending you an important message.
> >
> > Looking quickly in a mail order catalogue, I notice that the parts numbers
> > for the 78-86 power master cylinder are not the same as the master for
> > the 87-89 YJ, the 90-94 (without ABS) or the 95 YJ (with or w/o ABS).
> > All different, as are the proportioning valves for 82-86 and 87-93. Even
> > if you can physically make it fit (remember the sheet metal redesign at
> > the end of the CJ run -- did they change pedal assemblies too?), you still
> > should want to know if they are hydraulically equal. Looking again, the
> > front calipers fit 82 through 89, then change for 90 through 00, the rear
> > cylinders fit 76 through 89.
> >
> > Call me a yellow-livered milktoast mamma's boy chicken corporate
> > ***-sucker if you like, but I wouldn't mess around with brakes unless I
> > knew for sure I was doing the right thing. The "right thing" in this case
> > would be getting the right master and booster for my Jeep instead of
> > trying to cobble something up from bits and pieces. You're not going to
> > feel too good about it if the first time you panic-stab the brakes you
> > lock the front wheels, skid and kill someone other than yourself.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
Chrysler took them over and changed a whole mess of stuff including the
brakes.
They changed the calipers, the master, the combination valve, etc....
A 94 master will 'NOT' work on a CJ7, period.
I just called my local parts store and asked them the price for an 86
CJ7's power brake master cylinder.
It costs $53.00 minus a $15.00 rebate for the old one.
$38.00!!!!!!!!!!! In Canadian dollars even.....
I for one sure the hell won't risk my life over forty bucks!
Buy the right parts please.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
Jet wrote:
>
> no Lee I have not made funeral arraignments. but I do live on the top of a
> hill from a school and when I work on my jeep I like to drink allot of beer
> and oh yea my emergency brake cables are rusted and don't work, you know
> those old jeeps. and my jeep has a supercharger 454 in it so I always have
> the throttle wide open so I don't use brakes that much. but I hope
> everything will be o.k.
> but seriously I called the guy who sold me the booster and he said it is
> off of a 94 wrangler with a 4 liter 6 cyl. I would think that if I keep the
> same master cylinder and proportioning valve that the front to back
> difference in pressure would stay the same and I would be increasing the
> pressure with the booster. just because they changed the part don't mean it
> wont work maybe they were just looking for a different pedal pressure. has
> anyone done a CJ to wrangler brake conversion? thanks carmine
>
> "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@ntplx.net> wrote in message
> news:Pine.GSO.4.43.0312051155370.13615-100000@sea.ntplx.net...
> > On or about Thu, 4 Dec 2003, Jet of jet@bestweb.net wrote:
> >
> > > I bought a vacuum booster and a master cylinder of a wrangler on ebay
> and
> > > will be installing it on my 86 cj7 this weekend.
> >
> > Have you made reservations for your funeral on Tuesday?
> >
> >
> > > my jeep has front disks and back drum brakes with a proportioning valve
> > > mounted to the frame. I noticed that the wrangler master cylinder has
> > > the brake lines coming out of the opposite side is this a problem? can I
> > > unbolt the wrangler master cylinder and bolt my CJ master cylinder on
> > > and not have to bleed the brakes? or do I have to use the master
> > > cylinder and booster as a set? where should I hook up the vacuum line
> > > to? anything else anyone can think of that I should do or should'nt do?
> > > thanks carmine
> >
> > I think you might be in for some trouble making it fit, and the brake
> > lines are sending you an important message.
> >
> > Looking quickly in a mail order catalogue, I notice that the parts numbers
> > for the 78-86 power master cylinder are not the same as the master for
> > the 87-89 YJ, the 90-94 (without ABS) or the 95 YJ (with or w/o ABS).
> > All different, as are the proportioning valves for 82-86 and 87-93. Even
> > if you can physically make it fit (remember the sheet metal redesign at
> > the end of the CJ run -- did they change pedal assemblies too?), you still
> > should want to know if they are hydraulically equal. Looking again, the
> > front calipers fit 82 through 89, then change for 90 through 00, the rear
> > cylinders fit 76 through 89.
> >
> > Call me a yellow-livered milktoast mamma's boy chicken corporate
> > ***-sucker if you like, but I wouldn't mess around with brakes unless I
> > knew for sure I was doing the right thing. The "right thing" in this case
> > would be getting the right master and booster for my Jeep instead of
> > trying to cobble something up from bits and pieces. You're not going to
> > feel too good about it if the first time you panic-stab the brakes you
> > lock the front wheels, skid and kill someone other than yourself.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
#18
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: installing power brakes on a cj?
In 91, the AMC designed Jeep disappeared.
Chrysler took them over and changed a whole mess of stuff including the
brakes.
They changed the calipers, the master, the combination valve, etc....
A 94 master will 'NOT' work on a CJ7, period.
I just called my local parts store and asked them the price for an 86
CJ7's power brake master cylinder.
It costs $53.00 minus a $15.00 rebate for the old one.
$38.00!!!!!!!!!!! In Canadian dollars even.....
I for one sure the hell won't risk my life over forty bucks!
Buy the right parts please.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
Jet wrote:
>
> no Lee I have not made funeral arraignments. but I do live on the top of a
> hill from a school and when I work on my jeep I like to drink allot of beer
> and oh yea my emergency brake cables are rusted and don't work, you know
> those old jeeps. and my jeep has a supercharger 454 in it so I always have
> the throttle wide open so I don't use brakes that much. but I hope
> everything will be o.k.
> but seriously I called the guy who sold me the booster and he said it is
> off of a 94 wrangler with a 4 liter 6 cyl. I would think that if I keep the
> same master cylinder and proportioning valve that the front to back
> difference in pressure would stay the same and I would be increasing the
> pressure with the booster. just because they changed the part don't mean it
> wont work maybe they were just looking for a different pedal pressure. has
> anyone done a CJ to wrangler brake conversion? thanks carmine
>
> "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@ntplx.net> wrote in message
> news:Pine.GSO.4.43.0312051155370.13615-100000@sea.ntplx.net...
> > On or about Thu, 4 Dec 2003, Jet of jet@bestweb.net wrote:
> >
> > > I bought a vacuum booster and a master cylinder of a wrangler on ebay
> and
> > > will be installing it on my 86 cj7 this weekend.
> >
> > Have you made reservations for your funeral on Tuesday?
> >
> >
> > > my jeep has front disks and back drum brakes with a proportioning valve
> > > mounted to the frame. I noticed that the wrangler master cylinder has
> > > the brake lines coming out of the opposite side is this a problem? can I
> > > unbolt the wrangler master cylinder and bolt my CJ master cylinder on
> > > and not have to bleed the brakes? or do I have to use the master
> > > cylinder and booster as a set? where should I hook up the vacuum line
> > > to? anything else anyone can think of that I should do or should'nt do?
> > > thanks carmine
> >
> > I think you might be in for some trouble making it fit, and the brake
> > lines are sending you an important message.
> >
> > Looking quickly in a mail order catalogue, I notice that the parts numbers
> > for the 78-86 power master cylinder are not the same as the master for
> > the 87-89 YJ, the 90-94 (without ABS) or the 95 YJ (with or w/o ABS).
> > All different, as are the proportioning valves for 82-86 and 87-93. Even
> > if you can physically make it fit (remember the sheet metal redesign at
> > the end of the CJ run -- did they change pedal assemblies too?), you still
> > should want to know if they are hydraulically equal. Looking again, the
> > front calipers fit 82 through 89, then change for 90 through 00, the rear
> > cylinders fit 76 through 89.
> >
> > Call me a yellow-livered milktoast mamma's boy chicken corporate
> > ***-sucker if you like, but I wouldn't mess around with brakes unless I
> > knew for sure I was doing the right thing. The "right thing" in this case
> > would be getting the right master and booster for my Jeep instead of
> > trying to cobble something up from bits and pieces. You're not going to
> > feel too good about it if the first time you panic-stab the brakes you
> > lock the front wheels, skid and kill someone other than yourself.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
Chrysler took them over and changed a whole mess of stuff including the
brakes.
They changed the calipers, the master, the combination valve, etc....
A 94 master will 'NOT' work on a CJ7, period.
I just called my local parts store and asked them the price for an 86
CJ7's power brake master cylinder.
It costs $53.00 minus a $15.00 rebate for the old one.
$38.00!!!!!!!!!!! In Canadian dollars even.....
I for one sure the hell won't risk my life over forty bucks!
Buy the right parts please.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
Jet wrote:
>
> no Lee I have not made funeral arraignments. but I do live on the top of a
> hill from a school and when I work on my jeep I like to drink allot of beer
> and oh yea my emergency brake cables are rusted and don't work, you know
> those old jeeps. and my jeep has a supercharger 454 in it so I always have
> the throttle wide open so I don't use brakes that much. but I hope
> everything will be o.k.
> but seriously I called the guy who sold me the booster and he said it is
> off of a 94 wrangler with a 4 liter 6 cyl. I would think that if I keep the
> same master cylinder and proportioning valve that the front to back
> difference in pressure would stay the same and I would be increasing the
> pressure with the booster. just because they changed the part don't mean it
> wont work maybe they were just looking for a different pedal pressure. has
> anyone done a CJ to wrangler brake conversion? thanks carmine
>
> "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@ntplx.net> wrote in message
> news:Pine.GSO.4.43.0312051155370.13615-100000@sea.ntplx.net...
> > On or about Thu, 4 Dec 2003, Jet of jet@bestweb.net wrote:
> >
> > > I bought a vacuum booster and a master cylinder of a wrangler on ebay
> and
> > > will be installing it on my 86 cj7 this weekend.
> >
> > Have you made reservations for your funeral on Tuesday?
> >
> >
> > > my jeep has front disks and back drum brakes with a proportioning valve
> > > mounted to the frame. I noticed that the wrangler master cylinder has
> > > the brake lines coming out of the opposite side is this a problem? can I
> > > unbolt the wrangler master cylinder and bolt my CJ master cylinder on
> > > and not have to bleed the brakes? or do I have to use the master
> > > cylinder and booster as a set? where should I hook up the vacuum line
> > > to? anything else anyone can think of that I should do or should'nt do?
> > > thanks carmine
> >
> > I think you might be in for some trouble making it fit, and the brake
> > lines are sending you an important message.
> >
> > Looking quickly in a mail order catalogue, I notice that the parts numbers
> > for the 78-86 power master cylinder are not the same as the master for
> > the 87-89 YJ, the 90-94 (without ABS) or the 95 YJ (with or w/o ABS).
> > All different, as are the proportioning valves for 82-86 and 87-93. Even
> > if you can physically make it fit (remember the sheet metal redesign at
> > the end of the CJ run -- did they change pedal assemblies too?), you still
> > should want to know if they are hydraulically equal. Looking again, the
> > front calipers fit 82 through 89, then change for 90 through 00, the rear
> > cylinders fit 76 through 89.
> >
> > Call me a yellow-livered milktoast mamma's boy chicken corporate
> > ***-sucker if you like, but I wouldn't mess around with brakes unless I
> > knew for sure I was doing the right thing. The "right thing" in this case
> > would be getting the right master and booster for my Jeep instead of
> > trying to cobble something up from bits and pieces. You're not going to
> > feel too good about it if the first time you panic-stab the brakes you
> > lock the front wheels, skid and kill someone other than yourself.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
#19
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: installing power brakes on a cj?
In 91, the AMC designed Jeep disappeared.
Chrysler took them over and changed a whole mess of stuff including the
brakes.
They changed the calipers, the master, the combination valve, etc....
A 94 master will 'NOT' work on a CJ7, period.
I just called my local parts store and asked them the price for an 86
CJ7's power brake master cylinder.
It costs $53.00 minus a $15.00 rebate for the old one.
$38.00!!!!!!!!!!! In Canadian dollars even.....
I for one sure the hell won't risk my life over forty bucks!
Buy the right parts please.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
Jet wrote:
>
> no Lee I have not made funeral arraignments. but I do live on the top of a
> hill from a school and when I work on my jeep I like to drink allot of beer
> and oh yea my emergency brake cables are rusted and don't work, you know
> those old jeeps. and my jeep has a supercharger 454 in it so I always have
> the throttle wide open so I don't use brakes that much. but I hope
> everything will be o.k.
> but seriously I called the guy who sold me the booster and he said it is
> off of a 94 wrangler with a 4 liter 6 cyl. I would think that if I keep the
> same master cylinder and proportioning valve that the front to back
> difference in pressure would stay the same and I would be increasing the
> pressure with the booster. just because they changed the part don't mean it
> wont work maybe they were just looking for a different pedal pressure. has
> anyone done a CJ to wrangler brake conversion? thanks carmine
>
> "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@ntplx.net> wrote in message
> news:Pine.GSO.4.43.0312051155370.13615-100000@sea.ntplx.net...
> > On or about Thu, 4 Dec 2003, Jet of jet@bestweb.net wrote:
> >
> > > I bought a vacuum booster and a master cylinder of a wrangler on ebay
> and
> > > will be installing it on my 86 cj7 this weekend.
> >
> > Have you made reservations for your funeral on Tuesday?
> >
> >
> > > my jeep has front disks and back drum brakes with a proportioning valve
> > > mounted to the frame. I noticed that the wrangler master cylinder has
> > > the brake lines coming out of the opposite side is this a problem? can I
> > > unbolt the wrangler master cylinder and bolt my CJ master cylinder on
> > > and not have to bleed the brakes? or do I have to use the master
> > > cylinder and booster as a set? where should I hook up the vacuum line
> > > to? anything else anyone can think of that I should do or should'nt do?
> > > thanks carmine
> >
> > I think you might be in for some trouble making it fit, and the brake
> > lines are sending you an important message.
> >
> > Looking quickly in a mail order catalogue, I notice that the parts numbers
> > for the 78-86 power master cylinder are not the same as the master for
> > the 87-89 YJ, the 90-94 (without ABS) or the 95 YJ (with or w/o ABS).
> > All different, as are the proportioning valves for 82-86 and 87-93. Even
> > if you can physically make it fit (remember the sheet metal redesign at
> > the end of the CJ run -- did they change pedal assemblies too?), you still
> > should want to know if they are hydraulically equal. Looking again, the
> > front calipers fit 82 through 89, then change for 90 through 00, the rear
> > cylinders fit 76 through 89.
> >
> > Call me a yellow-livered milktoast mamma's boy chicken corporate
> > ***-sucker if you like, but I wouldn't mess around with brakes unless I
> > knew for sure I was doing the right thing. The "right thing" in this case
> > would be getting the right master and booster for my Jeep instead of
> > trying to cobble something up from bits and pieces. You're not going to
> > feel too good about it if the first time you panic-stab the brakes you
> > lock the front wheels, skid and kill someone other than yourself.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
Chrysler took them over and changed a whole mess of stuff including the
brakes.
They changed the calipers, the master, the combination valve, etc....
A 94 master will 'NOT' work on a CJ7, period.
I just called my local parts store and asked them the price for an 86
CJ7's power brake master cylinder.
It costs $53.00 minus a $15.00 rebate for the old one.
$38.00!!!!!!!!!!! In Canadian dollars even.....
I for one sure the hell won't risk my life over forty bucks!
Buy the right parts please.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
Jet wrote:
>
> no Lee I have not made funeral arraignments. but I do live on the top of a
> hill from a school and when I work on my jeep I like to drink allot of beer
> and oh yea my emergency brake cables are rusted and don't work, you know
> those old jeeps. and my jeep has a supercharger 454 in it so I always have
> the throttle wide open so I don't use brakes that much. but I hope
> everything will be o.k.
> but seriously I called the guy who sold me the booster and he said it is
> off of a 94 wrangler with a 4 liter 6 cyl. I would think that if I keep the
> same master cylinder and proportioning valve that the front to back
> difference in pressure would stay the same and I would be increasing the
> pressure with the booster. just because they changed the part don't mean it
> wont work maybe they were just looking for a different pedal pressure. has
> anyone done a CJ to wrangler brake conversion? thanks carmine
>
> "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@ntplx.net> wrote in message
> news:Pine.GSO.4.43.0312051155370.13615-100000@sea.ntplx.net...
> > On or about Thu, 4 Dec 2003, Jet of jet@bestweb.net wrote:
> >
> > > I bought a vacuum booster and a master cylinder of a wrangler on ebay
> and
> > > will be installing it on my 86 cj7 this weekend.
> >
> > Have you made reservations for your funeral on Tuesday?
> >
> >
> > > my jeep has front disks and back drum brakes with a proportioning valve
> > > mounted to the frame. I noticed that the wrangler master cylinder has
> > > the brake lines coming out of the opposite side is this a problem? can I
> > > unbolt the wrangler master cylinder and bolt my CJ master cylinder on
> > > and not have to bleed the brakes? or do I have to use the master
> > > cylinder and booster as a set? where should I hook up the vacuum line
> > > to? anything else anyone can think of that I should do or should'nt do?
> > > thanks carmine
> >
> > I think you might be in for some trouble making it fit, and the brake
> > lines are sending you an important message.
> >
> > Looking quickly in a mail order catalogue, I notice that the parts numbers
> > for the 78-86 power master cylinder are not the same as the master for
> > the 87-89 YJ, the 90-94 (without ABS) or the 95 YJ (with or w/o ABS).
> > All different, as are the proportioning valves for 82-86 and 87-93. Even
> > if you can physically make it fit (remember the sheet metal redesign at
> > the end of the CJ run -- did they change pedal assemblies too?), you still
> > should want to know if they are hydraulically equal. Looking again, the
> > front calipers fit 82 through 89, then change for 90 through 00, the rear
> > cylinders fit 76 through 89.
> >
> > Call me a yellow-livered milktoast mamma's boy chicken corporate
> > ***-sucker if you like, but I wouldn't mess around with brakes unless I
> > knew for sure I was doing the right thing. The "right thing" in this case
> > would be getting the right master and booster for my Jeep instead of
> > trying to cobble something up from bits and pieces. You're not going to
> > feel too good about it if the first time you panic-stab the brakes you
> > lock the front wheels, skid and kill someone other than yourself.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
#20
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: installing power brakes on a cj?
here are some boosters on ebay
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eB...tem=2445197077
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eB...tem=2445197077
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eB...tem=2444175893
thanks carmine
"Mike Romain" <romainm@sympatico.ca> wrote in message
news:3FD126E3.69EE893A@sympatico.ca...
> In 91, the AMC designed Jeep disappeared.
>
> Chrysler took them over and changed a whole mess of stuff including the
> brakes.
>
> They changed the calipers, the master, the combination valve, etc....
>
> A 94 master will 'NOT' work on a CJ7, period.
>
> I just called my local parts store and asked them the price for an 86
> CJ7's power brake master cylinder.
>
> It costs $53.00 minus a $15.00 rebate for the old one.
> $38.00!!!!!!!!!!! In Canadian dollars even.....
>
> I for one sure the hell won't risk my life over forty bucks!
>
> Buy the right parts please.
>
> Mike
> 86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> 88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
>
> Jet wrote:
> >
> > no Lee I have not made funeral arraignments. but I do live on the top of
a
> > hill from a school and when I work on my jeep I like to drink allot of
beer
> > and oh yea my emergency brake cables are rusted and don't work, you know
> > those old jeeps. and my jeep has a supercharger 454 in it so I always
have
> > the throttle wide open so I don't use brakes that much. but I hope
> > everything will be o.k.
> > but seriously I called the guy who sold me the booster and he said it
is
> > off of a 94 wrangler with a 4 liter 6 cyl. I would think that if I keep
the
> > same master cylinder and proportioning valve that the front to back
> > difference in pressure would stay the same and I would be increasing the
> > pressure with the booster. just because they changed the part don't mean
it
> > wont work maybe they were just looking for a different pedal pressure.
has
> > anyone done a CJ to wrangler brake conversion? thanks carmine
> >
> > "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@ntplx.net> wrote in message
> > news:Pine.GSO.4.43.0312051155370.13615-100000@sea.ntplx.net...
> > > On or about Thu, 4 Dec 2003, Jet of jet@bestweb.net wrote:
> > >
> > > > I bought a vacuum booster and a master cylinder of a wrangler on
ebay
> > and
> > > > will be installing it on my 86 cj7 this weekend.
> > >
> > > Have you made reservations for your funeral on Tuesday?
> > >
> > >
> > > > my jeep has front disks and back drum brakes with a proportioning
valve
> > > > mounted to the frame. I noticed that the wrangler master cylinder
has
> > > > the brake lines coming out of the opposite side is this a problem?
can I
> > > > unbolt the wrangler master cylinder and bolt my CJ master cylinder
on
> > > > and not have to bleed the brakes? or do I have to use the master
> > > > cylinder and booster as a set? where should I hook up the vacuum
line
> > > > to? anything else anyone can think of that I should do or should'nt
do?
> > > > thanks carmine
> > >
> > > I think you might be in for some trouble making it fit, and the brake
> > > lines are sending you an important message.
> > >
> > > Looking quickly in a mail order catalogue, I notice that the parts
numbers
> > > for the 78-86 power master cylinder are not the same as the master for
> > > the 87-89 YJ, the 90-94 (without ABS) or the 95 YJ (with or w/o ABS).
> > > All different, as are the proportioning valves for 82-86 and 87-93.
Even
> > > if you can physically make it fit (remember the sheet metal redesign
at
> > > the end of the CJ run -- did they change pedal assemblies too?), you
still
> > > should want to know if they are hydraulically equal. Looking again,
the
> > > front calipers fit 82 through 89, then change for 90 through 00, the
rear
> > > cylinders fit 76 through 89.
> > >
> > > Call me a yellow-livered milktoast mamma's boy chicken corporate
> > > ***-sucker if you like, but I wouldn't mess around with brakes unless
I
> > > knew for sure I was doing the right thing. The "right thing" in this
case
> > > would be getting the right master and booster for my Jeep instead of
> > > trying to cobble something up from bits and pieces. You're not going
to
> > > feel too good about it if the first time you panic-stab the brakes you
> > > lock the front wheels, skid and kill someone other than yourself.
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eB...tem=2445197077
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eB...tem=2445197077
http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eB...tem=2444175893
thanks carmine
"Mike Romain" <romainm@sympatico.ca> wrote in message
news:3FD126E3.69EE893A@sympatico.ca...
> In 91, the AMC designed Jeep disappeared.
>
> Chrysler took them over and changed a whole mess of stuff including the
> brakes.
>
> They changed the calipers, the master, the combination valve, etc....
>
> A 94 master will 'NOT' work on a CJ7, period.
>
> I just called my local parts store and asked them the price for an 86
> CJ7's power brake master cylinder.
>
> It costs $53.00 minus a $15.00 rebate for the old one.
> $38.00!!!!!!!!!!! In Canadian dollars even.....
>
> I for one sure the hell won't risk my life over forty bucks!
>
> Buy the right parts please.
>
> Mike
> 86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
> 88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
>
> Jet wrote:
> >
> > no Lee I have not made funeral arraignments. but I do live on the top of
a
> > hill from a school and when I work on my jeep I like to drink allot of
beer
> > and oh yea my emergency brake cables are rusted and don't work, you know
> > those old jeeps. and my jeep has a supercharger 454 in it so I always
have
> > the throttle wide open so I don't use brakes that much. but I hope
> > everything will be o.k.
> > but seriously I called the guy who sold me the booster and he said it
is
> > off of a 94 wrangler with a 4 liter 6 cyl. I would think that if I keep
the
> > same master cylinder and proportioning valve that the front to back
> > difference in pressure would stay the same and I would be increasing the
> > pressure with the booster. just because they changed the part don't mean
it
> > wont work maybe they were just looking for a different pedal pressure.
has
> > anyone done a CJ to wrangler brake conversion? thanks carmine
> >
> > "Lee Ayrton" <layrton@ntplx.net> wrote in message
> > news:Pine.GSO.4.43.0312051155370.13615-100000@sea.ntplx.net...
> > > On or about Thu, 4 Dec 2003, Jet of jet@bestweb.net wrote:
> > >
> > > > I bought a vacuum booster and a master cylinder of a wrangler on
ebay
> > and
> > > > will be installing it on my 86 cj7 this weekend.
> > >
> > > Have you made reservations for your funeral on Tuesday?
> > >
> > >
> > > > my jeep has front disks and back drum brakes with a proportioning
valve
> > > > mounted to the frame. I noticed that the wrangler master cylinder
has
> > > > the brake lines coming out of the opposite side is this a problem?
can I
> > > > unbolt the wrangler master cylinder and bolt my CJ master cylinder
on
> > > > and not have to bleed the brakes? or do I have to use the master
> > > > cylinder and booster as a set? where should I hook up the vacuum
line
> > > > to? anything else anyone can think of that I should do or should'nt
do?
> > > > thanks carmine
> > >
> > > I think you might be in for some trouble making it fit, and the brake
> > > lines are sending you an important message.
> > >
> > > Looking quickly in a mail order catalogue, I notice that the parts
numbers
> > > for the 78-86 power master cylinder are not the same as the master for
> > > the 87-89 YJ, the 90-94 (without ABS) or the 95 YJ (with or w/o ABS).
> > > All different, as are the proportioning valves for 82-86 and 87-93.
Even
> > > if you can physically make it fit (remember the sheet metal redesign
at
> > > the end of the CJ run -- did they change pedal assemblies too?), you
still
> > > should want to know if they are hydraulically equal. Looking again,
the
> > > front calipers fit 82 through 89, then change for 90 through 00, the
rear
> > > cylinders fit 76 through 89.
> > >
> > > Call me a yellow-livered milktoast mamma's boy chicken corporate
> > > ***-sucker if you like, but I wouldn't mess around with brakes unless
I
> > > knew for sure I was doing the right thing. The "right thing" in this
case
> > > would be getting the right master and booster for my Jeep instead of
> > > trying to cobble something up from bits and pieces. You're not going
to
> > > feel too good about it if the first time you panic-stab the brakes you
> > > lock the front wheels, skid and kill someone other than yourself.
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >