Tandem master cylinder
Discussion
tvrski said:
IMO the first cylinder you move has to be connected to the front
I can't remember a master with separate pistons. I thought they consisted of one shaft with two sets of seals.
My problem is that these days I never change seals in a master cylinder as life is to precious to risk. The net result is that it is 10s of years since I took one apart.
Steve
steve_d said:
I can't remember a master with separate pistons. I thought they consisted of one shaft with two sets of seals.
My problem is that these days I never change seals in a master cylinder as life is to precious to risk. The net result is that it is 10s of years since I took one apart.
Steve
I think this Ford setup has one piston integral to the pushrod that supplies the outlet nearer the pedal, and a separate floating piston that feeds the outlet further away from the pedal. Although they've got different effective areas, the fact that the 'front' piston is floating means it produces equal line pressure to the rear one. I think the main differences are likely to be the displacement (may not be identical) and the fact that the two pistons have different failure modes.
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