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07-24-2006, 02:11 PM
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Senior Club Cobra Member
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Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: St. Louis,
Mo.
Cobra Make, Engine: 427 S.O. Dual Quad / Cobra undecided
Posts: 1,380
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Not Ranked
This probably isn't the answer you want to hear but unless you can see and feel the inside of both the slave and master cylinder it is going to be tough to tell which one, if not both, are causing the problem.
I had the same problem on an austin healy, after putting new seals in both the slave and master clylinder I still had a spongy clutch that kept getting worse.
I ended up sleeving both the slave and master cylinder after finding some very light scoring on the sleeve walls of both cylinders.
Never had a problem again after that.
My point is if I would have rebuilt both of them the first time I would have saved myself a lot of time and "creative language" in the long run.
Good luck
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07-24-2006, 02:20 PM
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CC Member
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Join Date: May 2004
Location: Palm Coast,
FL
Cobra Make, Engine: Shelby American CSX 4241 - authentically built
Posts: 2,573
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Not Ranked
Well, the slave is definitely bad. Pulled the boot and fluid poured out. But I found a source for the AFCO masters, so I have one of each coming and will just change both. Cheap insurance.
__________________
Sal Mennella
CSX 4241, KMP 357 - sold and missed, CSX 4819 - cancelled, FFR 5132 - sold
See my car at CSXinfo.net here >> CSX 4241
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07-24-2006, 05:23 PM
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CC Member
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Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Virginia Beach, Va & Port Charlotte, Fl.,
Posts: 2,293
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Not Ranked
It sounds like Mr. Hygroscopic was not your friend Sal...
__________________
Too many toys?? never!
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07-25-2006, 09:53 AM
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CC Member
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Join Date: May 2004
Location: Palm Coast,
FL
Cobra Make, Engine: Shelby American CSX 4241 - authentically built
Posts: 2,573
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Not Ranked
Looks like I'm not out of the water yet....
Pulled the slave apart yesterday, and sure enough, the seal was split in half. The bore was pretty corroded up too. Picked up a new one this morning and put it in. Bled the system out, and it's exactly the same, just with no leaks. So looks like the master is bad too. Might have got hyperextended or something when the slave seal split.
So yesterday when I thought the master was bad, I called Billy at HRE to see where to get a new one. He said I any speed shop will have one, I just need a 3/4 bore Afco torpedo. So I call Afco to see if I can get it direct, or get a close distributor. The guy there says "call Capitol Speed in MA, they stock them". Ok, great. I give them a call, and tell them I need a 3/4 bore Afco torpedo master. After the slave didn't solve the problem, I go get the box from Capitol speed which had just arrived from UPS. Open it up... it's a 7/8 bore standard style with built in resiviour. Wonderful. Call up the Capitol Speed and I'm told they never stocked or sold the 3/4 torpedo.
So now I am back to needing a master. At least I know the slave is new now, and the old slave WAS bad. But I still am not getting enough throw action to release the clutch. I adjusted the slave to fork rod to preload the fork a little to move me closer to the release point, but that's not healthy for the car, so it's just so I can still move it around.
Guess I'll have to get the Wilwood version? Also, could I go up to a 7/8 bore, or should I stick with the 3/4?
__________________
Sal Mennella
CSX 4241, KMP 357 - sold and missed, CSX 4819 - cancelled, FFR 5132 - sold
See my car at CSXinfo.net here >> CSX 4241
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07-25-2006, 01:27 PM
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CC Member
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Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Virginia Beach, Va & Port Charlotte, Fl.,
Posts: 2,293
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Not Ranked
The 7/8" piston M/C will give you a slightly longer stroke on your clutch actuating rod at the expense of a slight increase in required pedal effort. I run a 1" cylinder on my master cylinder. Personally I'd rather have a longer stroke and give up a little more pedal effort as a trade off. You'll be fine with the 7/8" M/C..
BTW... If you can hang with a 03/04 OEM Cobra clutch then nothing a hydraulic Cobra clutch can muster will slow ya down...
Dave
__________________
Too many toys?? never!
Last edited by undy; 07-25-2006 at 01:29 PM..
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07-25-2006, 02:15 PM
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CC Member
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Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Gilroy,
CA
Cobra Make, Engine: West Coast Cobra w/ Centrifugally Blown Big Block, Pickles, Onions, on a Sesame Seed Bun.
Posts: 493
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Not Ranked
Master
Sal,
I used Tilton master cylinders on mine after talking to a bunch of racers that had problems with other brands. They are available in a bunch of bore sizes and reservoir options as well...and come with all of the reservoirs in the kit. I don't know if they'll fit for you, but I'm happy with mine...all 3 of them.
One of the guys I spoke with used a composite master cylinder and had the thing blow in half at the knit line on his brakes...hit the wall. After that story, I was rather turned off by the composites.
As far as bore size, I can't say for your car. In my case, a 3/4 is barely enough to disengage the clutch. I'm using an internal throwout bearing type slave...valving is probably different. I tried using a 5/8" bore to make the pedal effort real easy; it didn't move enough fluid. 7/8 would make the pedal effort even harder than the 3/4 and would cause the slave to throw further.
I'd also make sure you're not exceeding the travel limit on the master or the slave. In my case, I had to build a custom stop for the master to avoid throwing the slave too far...which can damage it. This might apply to you as well, I'm not sure.
Last edited by ByronRACE; 07-25-2006 at 02:20 PM..
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07-26-2006, 01:07 AM
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CC Member
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Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Pleasanton,
CA
Cobra Make, Engine: CSX4771-CF. 1966 427 S/O
Posts: 197
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Not Ranked
Sal,
I have gone through 2 master cylinders and one slave and it still isn't right. When I rebuilt my master the 2nd time, the 1st time I got a brand new master form SAI, I noticed the internl spring was bent about 45 deg. My theory now is that the rod going from the pedal to the master is too long and when I push in the pedal I am jamming the internal piston return spring so far down in the bore that it is bending it. Then the spring pushes the piston back up the bore at an angle and wears it out. Both times I have rebuilt mine the fluid had tiny aluminum particles in it and you could see one side of the internal piston had been rubbing the bore.
Another thing I noticed was that when I received my new master from SAI the rod, pedal to cylinder, was shorter then my original. At the time I couln't seem to get the shorter rod to disengage the clutch properly but now I am thinking maybe I should have tried harder. I may not have bled it entirely?
Mike
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Rubber peelin' gears a jammin'!
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