Pics of my auction purchase.
Discussion
As Andy and Joe advised, I checked the bottom of my servo and unsurprisingly the top is shiny but the bottom don't look so good. Joe recommended a servo, but is this a direct replacement and will my existing master cylinder fit on it? If not, can anybody recommend one that hitches on without the chopping about?
This is the one I bought off eBay a few years ago...
[url]
|http://thumbsnap.com/0HG3yWwU[/url]
Fiesta Mk3 I think. See also...
http://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&a...
This is off a later model...
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/02-08-FORD-FIESTA-1-3-MK...
... and the m/cyl is wrong, but the vacuum take-off hole and m/cyl studs look like they are in the right place. For that money it would be worth checking out maybe? Worth a punt for less than 20 quid I'd say.The seller accepts returns so all you'd be risking is the return postage.
[url]
|http://thumbsnap.com/0HG3yWwU[/url]
Fiesta Mk3 I think. See also...
http://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&a...
This is off a later model...
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/02-08-FORD-FIESTA-1-3-MK...
... and the m/cyl is wrong, but the vacuum take-off hole and m/cyl studs look like they are in the right place. For that money it would be worth checking out maybe? Worth a punt for less than 20 quid I'd say.The seller accepts returns so all you'd be risking is the return postage.
Edited by v8s4me on Monday 15th February 23:45
I'll give it a go. Much thankly.
v8s4me said:
This is the one I bought off eBay a few years ago...
[url]
|http://thumbsnap.com/0HG3yWwU[/url]
Fiesta Mk3 I think. See also...
http://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&a...
This is off a later model...
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/02-08-FORD-FIESTA-1-3-MK...
... and the m/cyl is wrong, but the vacuum take-off hole and m/cyl studs look like they are in the right place. For that money it would be worth checking out maybe? Worth a punt for less than 20 quid I'd say.The seller accepts returns so all you'd be risking is the return postage.
[url]
|http://thumbsnap.com/0HG3yWwU[/url]
Fiesta Mk3 I think. See also...
http://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&a...
This is off a later model...
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/02-08-FORD-FIESTA-1-3-MK...
... and the m/cyl is wrong, but the vacuum take-off hole and m/cyl studs look like they are in the right place. For that money it would be worth checking out maybe? Worth a punt for less than 20 quid I'd say.The seller accepts returns so all you'd be risking is the return postage.
Edited by v8s4me on Monday 15th February 23:45
Just a slight word of warning, that unit may well be a very good find but please check the INTERNAL dimensions. There are quite a few servos with the same casing but you need to check carefully
firstly that the operating rod for the master cylinder is the same and has exactly the same displacement from the master cylinder mounting flange. (there may be a small adjuster which will enable you to get the tiny clearance necessary to ensure the servo isnt deflecting the master cylinder piston when you are not applying the brakes.
secondly that the operating rod at the pedal end has the same displacement as your original. This rod should be fixed. If the rod is a different length it will change the pedal travel and a small difference at the rod makes a big difference at the pedal. There are some with a shorter rod which wont give enough master cylinder deflection within the comfortable travel of the pedal.
You may also find the clevis pin hole is a different diameter (most likely larger) than the original which would require drilling the pedal and fitting a larger pin. It may also need shim washers if the clevis is wider than the pedal. And it should be a hardened clevis pin not any old bolt. That isnt an engineering problem provided the first two points are OK.
(when the research was done into alternative servos some years ago we were surprised by the number of variations in servos which superficially looked very similar)
Playing with the brakes obviously needs a lot of CAUTION. Finding out that you cannot quite get full cylinder depression when approaching an obstacle at full speed is not the time to find a problem. Apart from insurance issues we dont want to see any S cars lost! (Oh, not too keen on S drivers being lost either!)
firstly that the operating rod for the master cylinder is the same and has exactly the same displacement from the master cylinder mounting flange. (there may be a small adjuster which will enable you to get the tiny clearance necessary to ensure the servo isnt deflecting the master cylinder piston when you are not applying the brakes.
secondly that the operating rod at the pedal end has the same displacement as your original. This rod should be fixed. If the rod is a different length it will change the pedal travel and a small difference at the rod makes a big difference at the pedal. There are some with a shorter rod which wont give enough master cylinder deflection within the comfortable travel of the pedal.
You may also find the clevis pin hole is a different diameter (most likely larger) than the original which would require drilling the pedal and fitting a larger pin. It may also need shim washers if the clevis is wider than the pedal. And it should be a hardened clevis pin not any old bolt. That isnt an engineering problem provided the first two points are OK.
(when the research was done into alternative servos some years ago we were surprised by the number of variations in servos which superficially looked very similar)
Playing with the brakes obviously needs a lot of CAUTION. Finding out that you cannot quite get full cylinder depression when approaching an obstacle at full speed is not the time to find a problem. Apart from insurance issues we dont want to see any S cars lost! (Oh, not too keen on S drivers being lost either!)
greymrj said:
Just a slight word of warning, that unit may well be a very good find but please check the INTERNAL dimensions. There are quite a few servos with the same casing but you need to check carefully
firstly that the operating rod for the master cylinder is the same and has exactly the same displacement from the master cylinder mounting flange. (there may be a small adjuster which will enable you to get the tiny clearance necessary to ensure the servo isnt deflecting the master cylinder piston when you are not applying the brakes.
secondly that the operating rod at the pedal end has the same displacement as your original. This rod should be fixed. If the rod is a different length it will change the pedal travel and a small difference at the rod makes a big difference at the pedal. There are some with a shorter rod which wont give enough master cylinder deflection within the comfortable travel of the pedal.
You may also find the clevis pin hole is a different diameter (most likely larger) than the original which would require drilling the pedal and fitting a larger pin. It may also need shim washers if the clevis is wider than the pedal. And it should be a hardened clevis pin not any old bolt. That isnt an engineering problem provided the first two points are OK.
(when the research was done into alternative servos some years ago we were surprised by the number of variations in servos which superficially looked very similar)
Playing with the brakes obviously needs a lot of CAUTION. Finding out that you cannot quite get full cylinder depression when approaching an obstacle at full speed is not the time to find a problem. Apart from insurance issues we dont want to see any S cars lost! (Oh, not too keen on S drivers being lost either!)
May be a job for my trusted mechanic then. Thanks for that. firstly that the operating rod for the master cylinder is the same and has exactly the same displacement from the master cylinder mounting flange. (there may be a small adjuster which will enable you to get the tiny clearance necessary to ensure the servo isnt deflecting the master cylinder piston when you are not applying the brakes.
secondly that the operating rod at the pedal end has the same displacement as your original. This rod should be fixed. If the rod is a different length it will change the pedal travel and a small difference at the rod makes a big difference at the pedal. There are some with a shorter rod which wont give enough master cylinder deflection within the comfortable travel of the pedal.
You may also find the clevis pin hole is a different diameter (most likely larger) than the original which would require drilling the pedal and fitting a larger pin. It may also need shim washers if the clevis is wider than the pedal. And it should be a hardened clevis pin not any old bolt. That isnt an engineering problem provided the first two points are OK.
(when the research was done into alternative servos some years ago we were surprised by the number of variations in servos which superficially looked very similar)
Playing with the brakes obviously needs a lot of CAUTION. Finding out that you cannot quite get full cylinder depression when approaching an obstacle at full speed is not the time to find a problem. Apart from insurance issues we dont want to see any S cars lost! (Oh, not too keen on S drivers being lost either!)
Lot Number: 42
The book pack contains the original service book contains nine stamps of TVR specialist service history. Eleven old MoT certificates come with the car. Finished in Ruby wine with black leather piped in red. Full Targa roof, serviced 1,000 miles ago and fully waxoiled. Because it's a S3 it has factory upgrades of a wooden facia, extra leather finish items and the very desirable ‘Chimaera’ vented bonnet, plus the longer doors.
V5 present
MoT June 2016
4 owners
Recorded mileage 24,950
Estimate: £10,000 - 12,000
Result: £10,290
GinG15 said:
Lot Number: 42
The book pack contains the original service book contains nine stamps of TVR specialist service history. Eleven old MoT certificates come with the car. Finished in Ruby wine with black leather piped in red. Full Targa roof, serviced 1,000 miles ago and fully waxoiled. Because it's a S3 it has factory upgrades of a wooden facia, extra leather finish items and the very desirable ‘Chimaera’ vented bonnet, plus the longer doors.
V5 present
MoT June 2016
4 owners
Recorded mileage 24,950
Estimate: £10,000 - 12,000
Result: £10,290
That's the one. The book pack contains the original service book contains nine stamps of TVR specialist service history. Eleven old MoT certificates come with the car. Finished in Ruby wine with black leather piped in red. Full Targa roof, serviced 1,000 miles ago and fully waxoiled. Because it's a S3 it has factory upgrades of a wooden facia, extra leather finish items and the very desirable ‘Chimaera’ vented bonnet, plus the longer doors.
V5 present
MoT June 2016
4 owners
Recorded mileage 24,950
Estimate: £10,000 - 12,000
Result: £10,290
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