Hydraulically Challenged
- 2SwissTriumphs
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- Location: St.Gallen, Switzerland.
Hydraulically Challenged
Hi Everyone,
I´ve been in the garage this evening removing more parts from my restoration project. Namely the master cylinders, brake servo and clutch slave cylinder.
Unfortunately, they are not in good condition. The master cylinders have damaged bores due to the long time the car has sat in storage (nearly 30 years !), the clutch slave cylinder is totally seized and the servo contains quite a bit of brake fluid.
As far as I know, the clutch slave cylinder is the same as those fitted to TR6´s, so a replacement can be had fairly easily. However, I´m not sure of the availability of the other parts. What are my chances of finding spares or is it time to look into getting the cylinders sleeved ? Can the servo be rebuilt ?
The car is a LHD Mk1 Pi.
Regards,
Martin.
I´ve been in the garage this evening removing more parts from my restoration project. Namely the master cylinders, brake servo and clutch slave cylinder.
Unfortunately, they are not in good condition. The master cylinders have damaged bores due to the long time the car has sat in storage (nearly 30 years !), the clutch slave cylinder is totally seized and the servo contains quite a bit of brake fluid.
As far as I know, the clutch slave cylinder is the same as those fitted to TR6´s, so a replacement can be had fairly easily. However, I´m not sure of the availability of the other parts. What are my chances of finding spares or is it time to look into getting the cylinders sleeved ? Can the servo be rebuilt ?
The car is a LHD Mk1 Pi.
Regards,
Martin.
- Dave B
- Senior Member

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- Location: Wigan,Home of the mighty Warriors
Re: Hydraulically Challenged
The clutch master cylinder for the mk1 seems to be well catered for on eBay, assuming they are the same as rhd, brake master cylinders a bit thin on the ground although seal kits are available. Servos and repair kits are a lot harder to find new.
Club Member 2035
1970 2500 Mk2 in pimento red[/col
Toyota Avensis T4 Tourer
1970 2500 Mk2 in pimento red[/col
Toyota Avensis T4 Tourer
Re: Hydraulically Challenged
I'd look into resleeving. There are people over here that sleeve in stainless and rekit them for a cheaper price than replacing with unknown quality (chinese?) after market parts.
Tony.
Tony.
1976 2500 TC. converted to S specs.
Lots of bits
1999 BMW Z3.
2006 BMW 325ti.
Hopefully not needing too many bits.
.
Lots of bits
1999 BMW Z3.
2006 BMW 325ti.
Hopefully not needing too many bits.
.
-
Mike Stevens
- Site Admin

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- Location: South Oxfordshire, UK
Re: Hydraulically Challenged
Being a Mk1 PI, but LHD, does it still have the remote brake servo, or is it conjoined with the master cylinder? Also does it have a dual circuit brake system? I know a lot of LHD cars did, but not sure about Mk1.
I think resleeving must be a good candidate. You get to keep the original parts too - well, from the outside anyway!
Cheers,
Mike.
I think resleeving must be a good candidate. You get to keep the original parts too - well, from the outside anyway!
Cheers,
Mike.
(South Oxfordshire)
Register Member No 0355
1971 2.5PI Saloon Sapphire blue
1973 2.5PI Saloon rust some Honeysuckle
1973 Stag French blue
(1949 LandRover which is now back to its original light green!)
Register Member No 0355
1971 2.5PI Saloon Sapphire blue
1973 2.5PI Saloon rust some Honeysuckle
1973 Stag French blue
(1949 LandRover which is now back to its original light green!)
- kevinw
- Senior Member

- Posts: 1028
- Joined: Fri May 11, 2007 2:22 pm
- Location: Fareham, Hampshire on the Sunny South Coast
Re: Hydraulically Challenged
There is a chap called Ian Wannacott (I might not have spelt that correctly) who has a business, the name of whihc I annoyingly cannot remember based in Kenton, near Exeter who supplies common hydraulic parts and if he can't supply it, has a very good resleeving service. I've had a number of very esoteric parts sorted by him - for example, the brake master cylinder of a Bedford OB bus and clutch slave cylinder for a Bristol MW coach.
No connection with his business, other than a very satisfied customer.
Kevin
No connection with his business, other than a very satisfied customer.
Kevin
Kevin Warrington
No longer any Triumphs in the garage
but there is a bright red Mercedes SLK250
No longer any Triumphs in the garage
but there is a bright red Mercedes SLK250
- 2SwissTriumphs
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- Joined: Thu Dec 27, 2012 11:04 am
- Location: St.Gallen, Switzerland.
Re: Hydraulically Challenged
Thanks to all for help and advice
I will look up the re-sleeving service in Kenton but if anyone else can recommend a company, i´d be very grateful !
Regards,
Martin.
Mike, the car has a remote servo with it´s own cylinder and is mounted to a bracket on the rear end of the battery tray. It´s a single line system.Mike Stevens wrote:Being a Mk1 PI, but LHD, does it still have the remote brake servo, or is it conjoined with the master cylinder? Also does it have a dual circuit brake system? I know a lot of LHD cars did, but not sure about Mk1.
Cheers,
Mike.
I will look up the re-sleeving service in Kenton but if anyone else can recommend a company, i´d be very grateful !
Regards,
Martin.
- Alan Chatterton
- Senior Member

- Posts: 2945
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- Location: Redditch, Worcestershire
Re: Hydraulically Challenged
Mike weaver used someone very good to do his braking system as it was unique so had to be rebuilt rather than replaced.
Can't find who as I'm on a phone not a pc, but a trawl through his blog I'm sure names them.
Can't find who as I'm on a phone not a pc, but a trawl through his blog I'm sure names them.
Alan Chatterton
Location; Redditch
DEL 33 1972 Lines Stag Estate Tartan Red
Blog http://vml3m.blogspot.com/
Location; Redditch
DEL 33 1972 Lines Stag Estate Tartan Red
Blog http://vml3m.blogspot.com/
Re: Hydraulically Challenged
Hi
Because I have gone same route earlier I would like to advice the hydraulics seal kit available for the remote servo cylinder used in 2.5Pi Mk1 LDH cars:
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/1969-77-Rover ... 4ac970f36b
It is a "1969 -'77 Rover P6 2000, 2200 Lockheed servo seal kit" on ebay. Related stuff is available from same source that is actually http://www.powertrackbrakes.co.uk/ .
In my project, I had to re-use the old servo vacuum diaphragm rubber.
Cheers,
JS
&
another LHD 2.5Pi mk1
Because I have gone same route earlier I would like to advice the hydraulics seal kit available for the remote servo cylinder used in 2.5Pi Mk1 LDH cars:
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/1969-77-Rover ... 4ac970f36b
It is a "1969 -'77 Rover P6 2000, 2200 Lockheed servo seal kit" on ebay. Related stuff is available from same source that is actually http://www.powertrackbrakes.co.uk/ .
In my project, I had to re-use the old servo vacuum diaphragm rubber.
Cheers,
JS
&
another LHD 2.5Pi mk1
- 2SwissTriumphs
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Re: Hydraulically Challenged
Thanks JS - that´s a very useful link. I´ll get in touch with Powertrack and order up a kit as soon as I know the cylinder is serviceable. I shall have to drain the brake fluid out of the servo itself and check the diaphragm first though
I´ve dismantled and honed the master cylinders today, with mixed results. The clutch master has survived the long lay-up and just needs to be cleaned and rebuilt with a seal kit. However, the brake master cylinder is not so good. The piston was very stiff to move but eventually came free, leaving a thin ring of corrosion in the aluminium body. After approx 5 minutes of honing, this is no longer visable to the naked eye but can just be sensed with the tip of a finger inserted down the bore. As the chance of finding another cylinder in better condition seems very slim, I am tempted to put a seal kit into it and try it. If it´s going to have to be re-sleeved anyway, I might as well try my luck.
Or is that a daft thing to do ?
Regards,
Martin.
I´ve dismantled and honed the master cylinders today, with mixed results. The clutch master has survived the long lay-up and just needs to be cleaned and rebuilt with a seal kit. However, the brake master cylinder is not so good. The piston was very stiff to move but eventually came free, leaving a thin ring of corrosion in the aluminium body. After approx 5 minutes of honing, this is no longer visable to the naked eye but can just be sensed with the tip of a finger inserted down the bore. As the chance of finding another cylinder in better condition seems very slim, I am tempted to put a seal kit into it and try it. If it´s going to have to be re-sleeved anyway, I might as well try my luck.
Or is that a daft thing to do ?
Regards,
Martin.
Re: Hydraulically Challenged
Hi
If the rough area in the brake master cylinder is outer than where piston seal stops then it's safe just to replace the piston seal. Anyway, I honed two rusted master cylinders and used them with old piston seal, and even mixed the old piston between two master cylinders. They didn't leak, but I will replace the seal when I eventually put my car to roadworthy condition. Of course you should be careful because there are steep hills in your country. Thus, it would be better to have a dual circuit system although handbrake can be used in emergency.
I guess you are not going to use your car daily and you can observe the brake hydraulics behaviour long enough before taking any longer trips.
Regarding http://www.powertrackbrakes.co.uk/ I found it easier to buy via their Ebay offering. If they start mess things, you should state that you are buying seals for Lockheed servo LR18230 with boost ratio 4.25:1, slave cylinder bore 5/8" and reaction piston bore 3/8".
Cheers,
JS
If the rough area in the brake master cylinder is outer than where piston seal stops then it's safe just to replace the piston seal. Anyway, I honed two rusted master cylinders and used them with old piston seal, and even mixed the old piston between two master cylinders. They didn't leak, but I will replace the seal when I eventually put my car to roadworthy condition. Of course you should be careful because there are steep hills in your country. Thus, it would be better to have a dual circuit system although handbrake can be used in emergency.
I guess you are not going to use your car daily and you can observe the brake hydraulics behaviour long enough before taking any longer trips.
Regarding http://www.powertrackbrakes.co.uk/ I found it easier to buy via their Ebay offering. If they start mess things, you should state that you are buying seals for Lockheed servo LR18230 with boost ratio 4.25:1, slave cylinder bore 5/8" and reaction piston bore 3/8".
Cheers,
JS