Technical Help please
Discussion
My nipper’s just acquired a 63 Galaxie 500XL with a 427 and manual box.
The brakes are an issue.
It has the luxury of a servo but drums all round.
On initial braking there’s plenty of assistance and they inspire confidence. HOWEVER, if and when you decide (usually in a panic) you need to brake hard the assistance seem to disappear and it’s as if the servo has stopped working
Any thoughts?
The brakes are an issue.
It has the luxury of a servo but drums all round.
On initial braking there’s plenty of assistance and they inspire confidence. HOWEVER, if and when you decide (usually in a panic) you need to brake hard the assistance seem to disappear and it’s as if the servo has stopped working
Any thoughts?
Every 50/60's car I've had, I've converted to front discs.
You'll never be happy with drums in modern traffic.
My 69 Rouadrunner currently sports big Willwoods all round.
Absolute night & day difference.


Plenty of bolt on conversions kits available.
Example here
https://leedbrakes.com/p-33751-ford-galaxie-front-...
You'll never be happy with drums in modern traffic.
My 69 Rouadrunner currently sports big Willwoods all round.
Absolute night & day difference.


Plenty of bolt on conversions kits available.
Example here
https://leedbrakes.com/p-33751-ford-galaxie-front-...
No leakage on slaves
Appreciate discs will be the answer to better brakes and I think this will be the way to go eventually.
What’s strange is that the servo IS working initially every time.
If it’s the servo, why would it work at all? I thought they either do or don’t think work. No halfway house??
Appreciate discs will be the answer to better brakes and I think this will be the way to go eventually.
What’s strange is that the servo IS working initially every time.
If it’s the servo, why would it work at all? I thought they either do or don’t think work. No halfway house??
HD Adam said:
Every 50/60's car I've had, I've converted to front discs.
You'll never be happy with drums in modern traffic.
My 69 Rouadrunner currently sports big Willwoods all round.
Absolute night & day difference.


Plenty of bolt on conversions kits available.
Example here
https://leedbrakes.com/p-33751-ford-galaxie-front-...
Thanks for this. Useful. You'll never be happy with drums in modern traffic.
My 69 Rouadrunner currently sports big Willwoods all round.
Absolute night & day difference.


Plenty of bolt on conversions kits available.
Example here
https://leedbrakes.com/p-33751-ford-galaxie-front-...
vpr said:
No leakage on slaves
Appreciate discs will be the answer to better brakes and I think this will be the way to go eventually.
What’s strange is that the servo IS working initially every time.
If it’s the servo, why would it work at all? I thought they either do or don’t think work. No halfway house??
I had a 64 Galaxie with the same problem. Brakes ok on first application, then very little assistance. Appreciate discs will be the answer to better brakes and I think this will be the way to go eventually.
What’s strange is that the servo IS working initially every time.
If it’s the servo, why would it work at all? I thought they either do or don’t think work. No halfway house??
Servos run on engine vacuum and performance cams can reduce this considerably - changing to a more sensible cam cured mine. Mine was also converted to discs quite cheaply using Ford parts.
(Separate electric pumps are available to augment vacuum for performance vehicles)
Edited by Shy Torque on Monday 31st May 20:41
Shy Torque said:
vpr said:
No leakage on slaves
Appreciate discs will be the answer to better brakes and I think this will be the way to go eventually.
What’s strange is that the servo IS working initially every time.
If it’s the servo, why would it work at all? I thought they either do or don’t think work. No halfway house??
I had a 64 Galaxie with the same problem. Brakes ok on first application, then very little assistance. Appreciate discs will be the answer to better brakes and I think this will be the way to go eventually.
What’s strange is that the servo IS working initially every time.
If it’s the servo, why would it work at all? I thought they either do or don’t think work. No halfway house??
Servos run on engine vacuum and performance cams can reduce this considerably - changing to a more sensible cam cured mine. Mine was also converted to discs quite cheaply using Ford parts.
(Separate electric pumps are available to augment vacuum for performance vehicles)
Edited by Shy Torque on Monday 31st May 20:41
Shy Torque said:
I had a 64 Galaxie with the same problem. Brakes ok on first application, then very little assistance.
Servos run on engine vacuum and performance cams can reduce this considerably - changing to a more sensible cam cured mine. Mine was also converted to discs quite cheaply using Ford parts.
(Separate electric pumps are available to augment vacuum for performance vehicles)
Forgot to say, due to the ridiculous cam & 6 pack carbs, I have a servo driven from the PS pump due to lack of vaccum.Servos run on engine vacuum and performance cams can reduce this considerably - changing to a more sensible cam cured mine. Mine was also converted to discs quite cheaply using Ford parts.
(Separate electric pumps are available to augment vacuum for performance vehicles)
Edited by Shy Torque on Monday 31st May 20:41

vpr said:
My nipper’s just acquired a 63 Galaxie 500XL with a 427 and manual box.
The brakes are an issue.
It has the luxury of a servo but drums all round.
On initial braking there’s plenty of assistance and they inspire confidence. HOWEVER, if and when you decide (usually in a panic) you need to brake hard the assistance seem to disappear and it’s as if the servo has stopped working
Any thoughts?
Do you mean if you hit the pedal hard there's no assistance or on the second pump there's no assistance?The brakes are an issue.
It has the luxury of a servo but drums all round.
On initial braking there’s plenty of assistance and they inspire confidence. HOWEVER, if and when you decide (usually in a panic) you need to brake hard the assistance seem to disappear and it’s as if the servo has stopped working
Any thoughts?
If it's first "hit" then when you say no assistance the pedal remains hard but the brakes don't slow you down? If the pedal still sinks I'd check the master cylinder first. It the pedal remains hard then I'd guess a servo leak.
If it's a second pump that doesn't work then it might be too little engine vacuum or a vacuum leak. Does it have a high lift cam fitted?
Bear in mind that a servo doesn't improve the brakes, it just makes it easier to push the pedal. So when the servo isn't working a good shove should still get the same result. I know it's not ideal if you don't know how hard to shove but it might help diagnose the problem.
So wobbling along the road and when you apply brakes to slow there’s a positive bite but on the same push of the pedal if you suddenly decide, actually I need to stop here, the pedal is hard and there’s no extra baking available unless you stand in it with two feet, wooden pedal with no assistance I think.
Shy Torque said:
vpr said:
No leakage on slaves
Appreciate discs will be the answer to better brakes and I think this will be the way to go eventually.
What’s strange is that the servo IS working initially every time.
If it’s the servo, why would it work at all? I thought they either do or don’t think work. No halfway house??
I had a 64 Galaxie with the same problem. Brakes ok on first application, then very little assistance. Appreciate discs will be the answer to better brakes and I think this will be the way to go eventually.
What’s strange is that the servo IS working initially every time.
If it’s the servo, why would it work at all? I thought they either do or don’t think work. No halfway house??
Servos run on engine vacuum and performance cams can reduce this considerably - changing to a more sensible cam cured mine.
Is the car an real original Q or R code Galaxie, or is it a made up 427?
If a made up car, likely the servo is setup for a lessor engine?
Vacuum leak? A mate of mine had a Mk 2 Jaguar. There was a vacuum storage tank under the front wing. Unbeknown to him it had a pinhole leak. Heavy braking was Ok at first. One the vacuum was depleted you had no servo assistance and the chances of stopping a ton or more of Jag with 4 non-assisted discs was the square root of f
k all!
k all!Sounds like you need a vacuum tank.
Might be ok & cheaper than a disc conversion.
https://www.summitracing.com/parts/sum-g1464b?seid...
Might be ok & cheaper than a disc conversion.
https://www.summitracing.com/parts/sum-g1464b?seid...
On the booster is the check valve, the round black plastic bit.
https://www.startpage.com/av/proxy-image?piurl=htt...
They go bad all the time, so take it out and if you can blow any air at all through the hose connector end, it's bad.
Start there because it's simple and free to check.
https://www.startpage.com/av/proxy-image?piurl=htt...
They go bad all the time, so take it out and if you can blow any air at all through the hose connector end, it's bad.
Start there because it's simple and free to check.
HD Adam said:
Sounds like you need a vacuum tank.
Might be ok & cheaper than a disc conversion.
https://www.summitracing.com/parts/sum-g1464b?seid...
If the 427 has a radical cam, will probably worthwhile even with a power disc conversion as well Might be ok & cheaper than a disc conversion.
https://www.summitracing.com/parts/sum-g1464b?seid...
If its a 'real' Q or R code car though and still has drums, its likely it was specced to go drag racing originally, as they only needed to work once at the end of the strip....

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