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8 & 10 cyl Bristol cars Type 407 onwards - restoration, repair, maintenance etc

410, 411, 412 servos

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Old 17-05-21, 01:03 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Geoff Dowdle View Post
David,
When you have confidence in the brakes I suggest you take the car out on a quiet country road at say 60 mph and when safe do an emergency stop .
You might find the front brakes might lock up!!!!!!!!!!!!

BCL would have done a lot of testing of Servos in conjunction with Lockheed for more than 10 years to decide on the original servos of the 410.

Geoff
Thank you for that, Geoff. I did try that yesterday on dry, straight road. I am pretty sure all 4 locked up. The car stayed pretty much straight throughout but one pair left darker rubber lines than the others and appear to have started further back along the road.

I do not know how to tell if one pair locked before the other. How do you know if front or rears locked first? I am guessing the darker line was the fronts as they carry a lot more weight in a hard stop and that line started further back (about 3 yards before the lighter lines appeared) but does that mean they locked first?

Any advice, please?

David
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Old 18-05-21, 03:54 AM
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David ,
I'm certainly not a brake expert/engineer but I would not want brakes on my Bristols to lock on a dry road .
Imagine what would happen on a wet road if you had to brake suddenly while going through a corner . It could be a disaster .

Years ago I had a 411S1 with standard brakes in good condition . They worked very well for normal road use . Pressing the pedal half way gave average to good braking, then pressing harder really pulled the car up , with no fuss or lockup.
It gave good feel and was not over assisted.

Drive carefully !!!!!!!!!

Geoff
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Old 18-05-21, 01:58 PM
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I had a 3.0 Si BMW on which I could lock up the wheels on a dry road - it happened on the Finchley Rd in London and I skidded into the back of a Porsche!


I'm sure I've had other cars with standard brakes on which I could lock up the wheels on a dry road.
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