1. Registration trouble? Please use the "Contact Us" link at the bottom right corner of the page and your issue will be resolved.
    Dismiss Notice

Another Parking Brake Discussion..

Discussion in 'Builds and Fabricators Forum' started by 47v6, Jan 30, 2023.

  1. 47v6

    47v6 junk wrecker! 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    All of these solutions are great, but they require engineering of some sort or another or a complete new brake system because they all seem to work on rotors that are under 1" thick. The only engineering I am willing to do to make these work at this moment are the wildwood ones if I can verify that they actually will fit over a rotor that is 1.28~1.30 thick.

    As far as cost goes, that is a similar price for those as used 11" backer and ALL new brake components. Those just bolt on and are brain dead easy.

    I really want to ensure that if I need to keep this thing in one spot on a hill that its not going to roll away and cause a catasphophy.
     
  2. 73 cj5

    73 cj5 Not ready for the junkyard yet

    If you do decide on 11" drums I know someone with backing plates...:whistle:
     
  3. duffer

    duffer Rodent Power

    As per Norcal69's post, yes.

    You can see the aluminum shim I added between the red "anvil", for lack of a better term, and the "body" here.
    [​IMG]

    The calipers are Wilwoods 120-12069-RD and 120-12070-RD, for 0.81" thick rotors. That shim moved the outer pad out far enough to just clear. The anvil on these is obviously pretty thick so there is more than a little leeway for spacing.
     
  4. Howard Eisenhauer

    Howard Eisenhauer Administrator Staff Member

  5. duffer

    duffer Rodent Power

    If you get Wilwood's MC4's for the 1.100" rotors, you will actually have a thinner shim than I used on mine. I mounted these backwards with the cables exiting towards the rear and then coming up over the left side of the diff cover to get them to the "between" the seats brake levers. I would have ended up with a BIG S curve in those cables if mounted conventionally and they would be exposed to a lot more hazards, not to mention the potential chafing on the ARB, vent, and brake lines.

    I used junk yard 70's Corolla ebrake levers, slightly modified. Those have been in there since about 1975.
     
    txtoller and 47v6 like this.
  6. duffer

    duffer Rodent Power

    I think the mods should move this thread to someplace where it is saved.
     
    txtoller and Jw60 like this.
  7. nickmil

    nickmil In mothballs.

    Most were, yes, but a couple years used thicker rotors and larger calipers that work with the thick Jeep/Scout rotors.
     
    Jw60 and 47v6 like this.
  8. 47v6

    47v6 junk wrecker! 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    I think they are 1975.. 2 years of them and they are not common. They also use a differnt mount IIRC than the Generic GM ones.

    I am once again looking very hard at the wilwood parking brakes. Duffer says I can add a shim to make them first over the thicker rotors.. this solution is not as cheap as just switching to drums, but drums.... It allows me to keep the disk brakes and also not think about re routing and remaking the brake lines. It does make me need to engineer a mounting bracket.. Thats about 2 hours start to welded on...

    This is the dumbest thing to have this much thought process and money spent on.
     
    Fresbone, Norcal69 and ITLKSEZ like this.
  9. Danefraz

    Danefraz Well-Known Member 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    but your wild thoughts inspire innovation (or a good dose of garage redneckery that works), and i get it, bolt-on is better.

    Also so says the guy that custom built his FF axles

    and you know, one day you will be parking atop the steepest hill above the convent/orphanage with a fresh tank of gogo juice, and all your cans for your two wheel toys in it also… so, preventing the orangegasmic high hood from becoming a orangetastic fireball is certainly a good idea.
     
    vtxtasy, Glenn and 47v6 like this.
  10. Glenn

    Glenn Kinda grumpy old man Staff Member

    Done!
     
  11. 73 cj5

    73 cj5 Not ready for the junkyard yet

    They use a thick rotor ~1.285"
    The mounting pattern is the same as a K10 caliper...around 7".
     
  12. 47v6

    47v6 junk wrecker! 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    https://www.rockauto.com/en/moreinfo.php?pk=21586&cc=1409385&pt=1704&jsn=438&jsn=438
    They are out there, but the issue is that they dont work very well by all accounts and as you can see, they dont come with the hardware for the parking brake. Those parts are actually very hard to come by. I would have done this years ago but it was so much of a PITA that I just gave up.
     
    73 cj5 likes this.
  13. 73 cj5

    73 cj5 Not ready for the junkyard yet

    Yea you'd have to source them from Ruff Stuff or somewhere else for complete new assemblies. The bad thing is when they go bad what will parts availability look like in 5, 10, or 15 years? Probably not good which is why I haven't committed to them.
     
  14. 47v6

    47v6 junk wrecker! 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    Ok, so the price for just these calipers
    https://goturbo.net/wil120-15484-bk...1-19in-piston-1-10in-rotor-black-120-15484-bk
    and the cables
    https://goturbo.net/wil330-9371-wil...mbination-parking-brake-mc4-w-clevis-330-9371
    but not the mount bracket or a parking brake handle is already 100 bucks more than 11" backer plates and the complete rebuild of the 11" drums..
    How bad do I want to keep the disks to say I have 4 wheel disks? Its not going to stop better for daily driving..

    What say you?
     
  15. Rich M.

    Rich M. Shoe salesman 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    11" drums or a pielut disc tcase brake
     
  16. danielbuck

    danielbuck Uncle Buck

    if someone made a simple kit to convert the D18 big drum parking brake to a disk, I'd considering picking it up. one less thing I'd need to make for myself. I pulled the drum brake off the D18 on my 46 for more ground clearance and have just lived with no parking brake for the past decade, and will probably do the same for my 56 since it doesn't work anyway and the handle/cable were messed up.
     
  17. Jw60

    Jw60 That guy 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    But you just made the spare rotor mount!?!?

    If I didn't hate drums i'ld agree to use the e-brake drums... but seeing that I have no drums on nothing and a hate for rusted springs and adjusters I say to stick to your disks.
    Just my personal opinion and entirely against logic.
     
  18. nickmil

    nickmil In mothballs.

    They don’t work well for people who don’t set them up correctly. Don’t bother to read the FSM on what the clearances should be set to and what the parameters are for making them work. The ones I’ve seen having issues typically are using the cheapest made caliper brackets that are not true, and do not true the rotors after pressing the wheel studs in to hold the rotor in place. This tends to slightly warp the hub and rotor, regardless of front or rear. On top of that they don’t adjust the cables to set the caliper piston adjustment correctly. There are pad to rotor clearances to be checked, but checked at the arm to arm stop on the caliper body. Most people don’t take these things into account because they want to shortcut things or don’t truly understand how everything works.
     
    Fireball and 47v6 like this.
  19. 47v6

    47v6 junk wrecker! 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    you make a good argument actually. Been so long since I had drums I forgot.
     
    Jw60 likes this.
  20. 47v6

    47v6 junk wrecker! 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    Thats what I pretty much read about them. Seems like drums are easier than those in that case.
     
    FinoCJ likes this.