North American Turbocoupe Organization



Brake guidance needed
RC Martin Offline
Posting Freak
#1
Never since I've owned my TC (7 years now) have I ever touched anything brake-related on it. The brakes work fine enough but I don't htink they'd lock up the tires if I laid into them, that's just how weak they've always been though. My rear drums squeek during moderate to heavy braking, so I figure they need new shoes. I plan to order a set of Motorcrafts to put on.

Is there anything I should watch out for while back there doing the shoes? I've never worked on drums before, I know they will be trickier than disk brakes (which I'd say are quite easy). Are there any special tools I need or brake hardware I should replace (there's a $6 drum hardware kit I see on Rockauto)?

Should I also bleed off a good amount of fluid? There's no telling how old my current brake fluid is. I've also never bled brakes before but it can't be that hard...
Thunderbird Turbo Coupe, Bright Canyon Red TuTone, Desert Tan Interior; 1 of 7 in this combo in 1984 according to Marti.  1 of 13,361 TCs in 84.
   Rebuilt, 3-Angle Valve Job, SYB37 "OE/Small" Slider Cam
   Full 3" Stinger Exhaust to Flowmaster 40, Gnari FMIC/Recirc/BPV, MBC @ 18psi, RF-E6 Manifold, Remote-Mount TFI, PC1 and Flowed 35# Injectors, Inline Walboro 255HP, Kirban AFPR
   Rebuilt Suspension -- KYB & Energy Suspension
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turbot79 Offline
Member
#2
Swap in an 8.8 and make it "easy"
88 tc, hbc, t3t4, 3"throttle body,3" stinger exhaust, msd, 18psi, Tial 50mm bov, Esslinger adjustable round tooth timing kit, rods header on the way and many more to come
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Not B Anymore Offline
Administrator
#3
All you really "need" once you get the wheel off is a pair of needle-nose pliers. That's about all I ever use... well... I use needle-nose vice grips. Get the hardware kit. It'll have all the springs and retainers and crap. If it were me and I didn't know when the last time was that anything back there was replaced, I would just throw in a new pair of adjusters as well since they're pretty cheap.

You're going to need a helper to bleed the rear brakes. It's easy to do with someone to pump the pedal for you. I replaced my fluid last time I did the brakes. Just kept bleeding them until the color changed from "oil brown" to clear. Keep a very close eye on the fluid level in the master cylinder though. You do not want that to run dry.

I use speed bleeders in the front which makes bleeding the front brakes really, really easy with one person, but they don't make them for the rear and those bleeder screws are hella small... 8mm I think.
Brian Leavitt
'86 TC 5-Speed -- MS2x w/COP | 83 lb. injectors | T3/T4 50 Trim Stage 3 .63AR | Full 3" Exhaust - No Cat | Motorsport FMIC | Ranger Roller | Ported E6 | Walbro 255HP | Kirban | 20psi | 120-amp 3G | 8.8" 3.55 rear | '03 Cobra Wheels
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Not B Anymore Offline
Administrator
#4
Oh and just do one side at a time. Maybe take a picture before you start taking anything apart. You may need a reference the first time you put it back together.
Brian Leavitt
'86 TC 5-Speed -- MS2x w/COP | 83 lb. injectors | T3/T4 50 Trim Stage 3 .63AR | Full 3" Exhaust - No Cat | Motorsport FMIC | Ranger Roller | Ported E6 | Walbro 255HP | Kirban | 20psi | 120-amp 3G | 8.8" 3.55 rear | '03 Cobra Wheels
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