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Since there has been a couple braking threads go by, I wanted to ask opinions on whether it's better to set the brake system up so the rear wheels lock first or the front wheels lock first, and why.
Generally it's held that if you cannot get all four wheels to lock simultaneously, the rears ought to lock just slightly before the fronts. That way, you can still steer. Once the fronts lose traction, your steering wheel input no longer determines where the car's headed.
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my Dart is set up so that the front and rear lock up at pretty close to the same time, with the front locking up slightly before the rear (usually). I've never had difficulty keeping the car straight in a panic stop.
My Satellite is all stock, and the rear brakes lock up hard long before the fronts, and in a real panic stop it's near impossible to maintain my lane. It's given me a couple scary stops.
OK, but you haven't got comparable cases there to judge front-locks-first vs. rear-locks-first. You've got the Dart on which the fronts lock
just slightly before the rears, and the Satellite on which the rears lock
long before the fronts.
Go put a set of Raybestos WC37696 (13/16" bore vs. stock 15/16") rear wheel cylinders in the Satellite and then either the problem will be all the way solved, or it'll be so significantly reduced that you can spend some time safely comparing the effects of front-locks-slightly-early vs. rear-locks-slightly-early.
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