“THE GREAT ROTOR RECOVERY”
I was very excited to get back to work on the ’55 this past
Saturday the 12th targeting the brakes. Here is a back story on the
brakes. The fluid is bad, developing a
lot of particulates that has infiltrated everything… master cylinder, hard
lines, all the way down to the calipers.
I decided to replace everything in
order to start fresh. I sourced all the parts with the exception of the hard
lines and master cylinder, I can do them later. Most recently I got new rotors
going off the information that the other front brake hardware was from a ’72 Camaro.
So Saturday, I sit down all excited ready to put everything on and.......
NOTHING FITS! The
rotor hits the backing plate, the caliper pins are on an angle as they slide
through the mounting holes, and the stock grease seal is smaller.
The calipers shocked me, because the originals have the GM
casting numbers and those numbers were used to get the new ones.
As I sit there completely deflated, I immediately think… “What’s
plan B?” I say to myself, lets try and
put the original rotor back on and see if the new caliper clears the rotor……CRAP!!!!!!
I left the original rotors at Advanced so they could dispose of them!!!! To put this all in perspective… the braking
system only has 4,500 miles on it and all the components are mechanically
sound. The calipers have the particulates
in them from the fluid; the rotors have 15 year old grease in the
bearings. I have new bearings and
grease, and I just found out yesterday that I can clean out the calipers.
What it all boils down to is, if I had the old rotors, I could
just put new bearings and grease in them and then I could flush out the
original calipers. I can return all the
new parts and get my money back…. Oh no, I don’t have the original rotors, I left
them for scrap. Now the other options
are, 1) keep going back again and again returning and re-buying new calipers and
rotors until I stumble across a match or 2) spend another 1,500 dollars a buy a
new disc brake conversion kit and start fresh.
I decide to call Advanced and see if they still have the
rotors, praying for a miracle, asking my dad to help me out….. I call and they
said that the guy that scraps them is out on parts run and they will ask him
when he gets back, then call me. 20
minutes later they call and say the rotors are not there…. My heart drops!!! 15 minutes later they call again and say
another employee may have them and she will be back in non on Sunday afternoon. I was feeling a little better; there is still
a chance I won’t have to drop 1,500 bucks!
To my amazement and relief, at 12:05 on Sunday the 13th, I got
the rotors back!
What went from a very expensive mess up on my part, has changed
to replaced four bearings and flushing out four calipers. Also on a bright
note, the money I’ll be getting back on the parts can go to other
items. My Budget says THANK YOU!!
Since I couldn’t go forward with the brakes, I decided to
turn my attention to the fuel system.
When I drained the gas tank a few weeks ago, the gas was still good even though it was
over fifteen years old – thank fuel stabilizer.
When the car was restored in ’97 we installed an external fuel filter
and electric fuel pump.
Since both of these are outside the tank, I expected the gas
in them to be bad.
As I lay under the car, ready to disconnect
the fuel line and see black tar pour out, I was amazed to see clear, good
smelling gas drain out of both. My dad must have put fuel stabilizer in the tank while
the motor was still running and not after the motor blew and it sat in the
garage. Safely, I did a burn test on the
gas, it passed. This is a great help since a fuel pump and fuel filter are around $150 to $200 each.This also means I do not have to replace the stainless
steel fuel line.
In order to get the fuel filter out, i had to pull the trunk carpet up to get to the bolt heads (something i need to change). In order to do that i needed to remove everything from the trunk. I took the opportunity to organise everything that went back in.
I was able to get the heater box reinstalled. I also installed new control cables, the original ones were sticking and binding. The upgraded control cables are inside a plastic jacket that is lubricated, they slide very nicely now.