No life (a.k.a. DattoMaster) 
Joined: 2008/10/10 22:02
From Melbourne Australia (and likely under the car)
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you can also use the one fitted to centuras, or to 'original' minis.
It's probably worth noting that these aren't a true proportioning valve, The proper ones will alter the relative amount of force given to the front and rear circuits - the harder you press the brake pedal, the higher both pressures go, but one will always be proportionally higher than the other.
The valve in the link, and the ones on minis etc, aren't a proportioning valve. they are a pressure limiting valve. Basically once you dial it in, the harder you push the pedal, the more pressure to the front brakes, all the way. but at some cut off point, once the rear pressure reaches a certain level, it will shut the valve and prevent the rear brake line pressure going any higher.
In practice they still work exceptionally well, even on a race setup. (obviously if you want every last bit out of the brakes, a true proportioning setup is required)
HOw does the hydraulic handbrake work? I've never actually seen one in the flesh, but the ones I've seen in a car (that I couldn't pull apart!) had it routed to a pair of separate smallish calipers on the rears, so that it would function 100% independant of the normal brakes, and was used for sliding the rear around.
If it routes into the existing system, what does it do, close off the port from the master cylinder line that goes to the rear (so the fluid isn't just bled backward into the master cylinder/reservoir) and apply it's own pressure or what?
also - I've got a centura one here (and likely a mini one too) you can have mate.
Posted on: 2012/2/3 9:24
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