Dual piston caliper
the haynes manual does say not to interchange MC's but does that still apply if i put 3500 calipers and wheel cylinders on mine? I mean it seems that the brake sytems would be nearly identical if i did that (except for the later model 3500's with hydroboost instead of a convential brake booster)
There's only one way to find out. I think our conversation on this topic specifically has ran it's course. Maybe someone else can help you.
Last edited by J415; Jun 18, 2010 at 03:57 PM.
There are aftermarket options but they can be pricey, the only upgrade using factory parts would be using a bigger single piston caliper
Here is a LINK to some 2 piston calipers but like stated pricey, do you really feel the need to spend 1k on calipers and pads
Or from the same company you can stay with the single caliper that is a 80mm piston and you get rotors and pads for $100 less...LINK
Here is a LINK to some 2 piston calipers but like stated pricey, do you really feel the need to spend 1k on calipers and pads
Or from the same company you can stay with the single caliper that is a 80mm piston and you get rotors and pads for $100 less...LINK
Last edited by redheadhunter21; Aug 19, 2010 at 11:27 PM.
Get better pads, turn the rotors, and install the new pads. I used carbon/ceramic on my Firebird, (which has SUCKY brakes from the factory) and was STUNNED at the difference in braking power.
My truck's got brand new rotors, pads, wheel cylinders, soft lines, and shoes. It's plain scary. I sent it to a shop for a wheel bearing change and asked them to check out the brakes assuming there was something wrong, but alas they were in perfect working order. Then I read these forums for a bit...
Next trailer season I'm putting on the larger single bores I guess.







