Handbrake
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- Posts: 1
- Joined: Sat Oct 07, 2017 4:07 am
Handbrake
Listers,
Can the handbrake be removed without removing the
muffler? The ratchet on my handbrake is not working so
I am trying to remove the the assembly, but the
tailpipe and muffler are in the way. Is there a better
way to do this?
Dave Stout
TC1176
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- Posts: 313
- Joined: Wed Jul 19, 2000 3:42 am
Re: Handbrake
Dave I do not believe that handbrake assembly can be removed easily,
but I think the ratchet assembly can beworked on with the handle and shaft
in position, removethe boot and study the situation. I think more than the
muffler has to be removed to get that assembly off the chassis
Joe Curto
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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- Posts: 2
- Joined: Sun Nov 15, 2009 12:06 pm
Handbrake
Good morning,
Last summer a lister wrote regarding the 2 plates that are located on the rear axle backing plates where tha emergency brake cable goes through. Along with the pics it concludes that both plates are located on the inboard side of the rear back plate. Sherrell indicated 1 on either side.
The writer indicated that the car in the photos was not on the road since the mid-seventies and likely original. However, that leaves almost 30 years prior to that for someone to alter the plates.
Since I assembled mine as per Sherrell I am wondering wether to change it.
I remember someone saying that there is a clipper blue TC in southern California that is all original. Has anyone checked it? Can anyone shed any light on this question? Thanks and Happy New Year.
Len Bonnay
TC8154
Canada
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- Posts: 292
- Joined: Mon Dec 13, 1999 4:38 pm
Re: Handbrake
#ygrps-yiv-1457649604 .ygrps-yiv-1457649604ygrp-photo-title { CLEAR:both;FONT-SIZE:smaller;OVERFLOW:hidden;WIDTH:75px;HEIGHT:15px;TEXT-ALIGN:center;} #ygrps-yiv-1457649604 DIV.ygrps-yiv-1457649604ygrp-photo { BORDER-RIGHT:black 1px solid;BACKGROUND-POSITION:center 50%;BORDER-TOP:black 1px solid;BORDER-LEFT:black 1px solid;WIDTH:62px;BORDER-BOTTOM:black 1px solid;BACKGROUND-REPEAT:no-repeat;HEIGHT:62px;BACKGROUND-COLOR:white;} #ygrps-yiv-1457649604 DIV.ygrps-yiv-1457649604photo-title A { TEXT-DECORATION:none;} #ygrps-yiv-1457649604 DIV.ygrps-yiv-1457649604photo-title A:active { TEXT-DECORATION:none;} #ygrps-yiv-1457649604 DIV.ygrps-yiv-1457649604photo-title A:hover { TEXT-DECORATION:none;} #ygrps-yiv-1457649604 DIV.ygrps-yiv-1457649604photo-title A:visited { TEXT-DECORATION:none;} #ygrps-yiv-1457649604 DIV.ygrps-yiv-1457649604attach-table DIV.ygrps-yiv-1457649604attach-row { CLEAR:both;} #ygrps-yiv-1457649604 DIV.ygrps-yiv-1457649604attach-table DIV.ygrps-yiv-1457649604attach-row DIV { FLOAT:left;} #ygrps-yiv-1457649604 P { CLEAR:both;PADDING-RIGHT:0px;PADDING-LEFT:0px;PADDING-BOTTOM:3px;OVERFLOW:hidden;PADDING-TOP:15px;} #ygrps-yiv-1457649604 DIV.ygrps-yiv-1457649604ygrp-file { WIDTH:30px;} #ygrps-yiv-1457649604 DIV.ygrps-yiv-1457649604attach-table DIV.ygrps-yiv-1457649604attach-row DIV DIV A { TEXT-DECORATION:none;} #ygrps-yiv-1457649604 DIV.ygrps-yiv-1457649604attach-table DIV.ygrps-yiv-1457649604attach-row DIV DIV SPAN { FONT-WEIGHT:normal;} #ygrps-yiv-1457649604 DIV.ygrps-yiv-1457649604ygrp-file-title { FONT-WEIGHT:bold;} hello Len - that was me! So two cars off the road for decades, and probably not altered from new. I have highlighted my last sentence, which (to me) makes perfect sense. The relevant texts were: I second that! Am just starting on a complete back axle removed from a
basket case car. The owner had removed the handbrake cables, but the back
plates have witness-marks only on the outside, where both plates must have
been. Nothing on the brake side. [b]It makes more sense to have the two plates
together, to hold the end of the cable and the washers more snugly.
[/b]Roger
Devon
Russ Wilson wrote:
are photos showing the two clamping plates that secure the end of> Here
cable as they were found on a very old installation (maybe original> the
it's been off the road for >35 years), on TC 6819. Both plates are on> -
the back side (differential side) of the brake backing plate. The order>
smaller> is: backing plate, gasket, larger plate (the one with the slot),
front side (brake side) of the> plate. > > Sherrell shows the larger plate on the
under it, and the smaller> backing plate, presumably with the gasket
configurations work, and I can't> plate on the back side. I know both
various pieces at the end of the cable are positioned as follows:> see why it matters. > > The
washer on the inside of the assembly to bridge the slot in the> flat
plate giving the spring a smooth surface to push on; felt washer> large
outside (back side) to act as a grease seal; split washer to let> on the
cable grease escape instead of being forced into the brakes. You> excess
can see the felt and split washers in my second photo. (BTW, the upper>
on the side> bolt is backwards in these photos. Both bolts had the nuts
> shown in the photos.)
I am using the Free version of SPAMfighter. SPAMfighter has removed 124 of my spam emails to date. Do you have a slow PC? Try a free scan!----- Original Message ----- [b]From:[/b] ljbmg@cogeco.ca [b]To:[/b] mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com [b]Sent:[/b] Sunday, December 30, 2012 2:39 PM [b]Subject:[/b] [mg-tabc] Handbrake Good morning, Last summer a lister wrote regarding the 2 plates that are located on the rear axle backing plates where tha emergency brake cable goes through. Along with the pics it concludes that both plates are located on the inboard side of the rear back plate. Sherrell indicated 1 on either side. The writer indicated that the car in the photos was not on the road since the mid-seventies and likely original. However, that leaves almost 30 years prior to that for someone to alter the plates. Since I assembled mine as per Sherrell I am wondering wether to change it. I remember someone saying that there is a clipper blue TC in southern California that is all original. Has anyone checked it? Can anyone shed any light on this question? Thanks and Happy New Year. Len Bonnay TC8154 Canada
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- Posts: 14
- Joined: Tue Apr 07, 2015 6:36 am
Handbrake
I'm having a nightmare with the handbrake. I don't mind nightmares with Sharon Stone, but handbrakes, no.
When I rebuilt the brakes I couldn't get the handbrake nactuating arm to retrcat because the arm that fits on the cable would not retract past the guid bracket screwed to the top of the sho. In the end, after hours of trying to figure out what was wrong I just left it off.
It would appear the the arm that goes across the top, just under the wheel cylinder is dropping because the guide isn't there.
So, I've put the guide back on and I'm back to square one. I've got the drum on but it's locked solid. I've slackened the cable but the shoes are pressed hard against the drum because the arm won't retract.
I'm suspicious of the new handbrake cable on this side and wondered if the ferrule that holds the cable to the chassis bracket by the front edge of the rear wheel could be in the wrong position thereby holding the cable out all the time. I'm just going to undo the two screws and see if that helps.
But in the meantime if anyone has any ideas, please shout.
A confused and tired Norman
TC10178
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- Posts: 38
- Joined: Thu Oct 21, 2004 6:43 am
Re: Handbrake
Norman, Perhaps just backing off the handbrake adjuster nuts near the handle would create some slack. Cheers, Lee Jacobsen, Dearborn, MI TC0780 -----Original Message-----
From: norman@frenchblat.com [mg-tabc] mg-tabc-noreply@yahoogroups.com>
To: mg-tabc mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Wed, Jun 1, 2016 11:55 am
Subject: [mg-tabc] Handbrake
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I'm having a nightmare with the handbrake. I don't mind nightmares with Sharon Stone, but handbrakes, no.
When I rebuilt the brakes I couldn't get the handbrake nactuating arm to retrcat because the arm that fits on the cable would not retract past the guid bracket screwed to the top of the sho. In the end, after hours of trying to figure out what was wrong I just left it off.
It would appear the the arm that goes across the top, just under the wheel cylinder is dropping because the guide isn't there.
So, I've put the guide back on and I'm back to square one. I've got the drum on but it's locked solid. I've slackened the cable but the shoes are pressed hard against the drum because the arm won't retract.
I'm suspicious of the new handbrake cable on this side and wondered if the ferrule that holds the cable to the chassis bracket by the front edge of the rear wheel could be in the wrong position thereby holding the cable out all the time. I'm just going to undo the two screws and see if that helps.
But in the meantime if anyone has any ideas, please shout.
A confused and tired Norman TC10178
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- Posts: 3
- Joined: Wed Jun 01, 2016 12:21 pm
Re: Handbrake
Hello Norman,
When I fitted new handbrake cables I found that the plastic outer coating was preventing the cable going fully into the hole in the chassis mounting, pulling the brakes on. By stripping back this coating, the cable dropped fully into the hole. There are some photos at http://tc4985.altervista.org/#handbrake.
David JamesWest SussexTC4985
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- Posts: 107
- Joined: Sun May 17, 2015 4:21 am
Re: Handbrake
David, I'm being a bit thick tonight. Do you mean the ferrule which is bolted to the chassis just after the adjusting nut or where it goes through the chassis further back and is held on with 2 x 3/16 BSF screws and nuts. I seem to have solved the problem. I often ask Lynne to come and look at a problem and explain it. She will say something silly but it sparks the thoughts and problem solved. This time she pulled the handbrake on and off and after about 3 times I heard a click and the actuating arm went in behind the shoe. It may have been the cable pulling into the ferrule. I did think it may be something like that so removed the 2 screws to move the cable further back because it looked tighter than the original cable on the other side. I hope that's OK now. Only the new cable to fit on the other side and the headlight bulbs and new lens. My daughters bringing them Saturday, so Sunday to get that done, the MOT on Monday and then engine out, leak fixed and back by the following Saturday. I'm going to work 0600 to 1000 Tuesday to Friday as I'll have to take daughter and son-in-law out all week. [b]Norman Verona[/b][u]La Foie, 49520, Noellet, France[/u]Tel: 0033 (0)2 41 92 73 44Mob: 0033 (0)7 70 70 23 79Web: www.frenchblat.comMG Midget TC 10178 [b]From:[/b] mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com [mailto:mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com] [b]On Behalf Of [/b]David James dr.david.james@gmail.com [mg-tabc]
[b]Sent:[/b] 01 June 2016 22:22
[b]To:[/b] mg-tabc@yahoogroups.com
[b]Subject:[/b] [mg-tabc] Re: Handbrake Hello Norman, When I fitted new handbrake cables I found that the plastic outer coating was preventing the cable going fully into the hole in the chassis mounting, pulling the brakes on. By stripping back this coating, the cable dropped fully into the hole. There are some photos at http://tc4985.altervista.org/#handbrake. David JamesWest SussexTC4985
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