750i MC upgrade myths

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  • cthulu703
    Wrencher
    • Oct 2004
    • 288

    #16
    I did the swap and found that it increases feedback quite a bit, very important when close to threshhold. I agree it doesn't affect brake pressure, just line pressure/pedal travel. If you don't like alot of feed back then don't do it, but a new one was cheaper than the direct replacement one, so you lose nothing by doing it.

    Comment

    • PeaveyBassist
      No R3VLimiter
      • Sep 2004
      • 3511

      #17
      Originally posted by parkerbink
      Oh I missed the joke in we hate you shame on me.
      Have you missed the joke of me being a smart ass a lot in the past couple months? Who is constantly pissing in YOUR cornflakes???

      Will
      RIP e30 (brilliantrot '91 325i) 11/17/06 Byebye: 8/21/07
      Welcome e30 (brilliantrot '90 325is) 12/23/06
      DaveCN = Old Man
      My signature picture was taken by ME! Not by anyone else!



      Originally posted by george graves
      If people keep quoting me in their sig, I'm going to burn this motherfucker down.

      Comment

      • static
        E30 Addict
        • Oct 2005
        • 501

        #18
        Originally posted by parkerbink
        Here is what I am missing. Some idiot noob misquotes me and somehow I get dragged into this shit. Who pissed in your cornflakes Will?
        please explain how exactly i misquoted you. i have not even quoted you on the first place.

        there is no shame in accepting you've made a mistake, but you do make yourself look immature by continuing being ignorant about it and calling others names in the process.

        I am sorry if i hurt your feelings in any way, did not mean to pick on you, just needed to give Jordan an example.

        And if you still haven't caught the drift of my thread, let me spell it out: it's mostly to help people like you. But it's really up to you if you want to be helped, some people prefer to stay ignorant. It's the world we live in.

        have a good one
        Alex

        Comment

        • PeaveyBassist
          No R3VLimiter
          • Sep 2004
          • 3511

          #19
          Wow... this thread went to shits ;) Sorry for pooping on your thread. Maybe we should have Pasha poop on Mr. Parkerbink's hood

          Will
          RIP e30 (brilliantrot '91 325i) 11/17/06 Byebye: 8/21/07
          Welcome e30 (brilliantrot '90 325is) 12/23/06
          DaveCN = Old Man
          My signature picture was taken by ME! Not by anyone else!



          Originally posted by george graves
          If people keep quoting me in their sig, I'm going to burn this motherfucker down.

          Comment

          • static
            E30 Addict
            • Oct 2005
            • 501

            #20
            Originally posted by PeaveyBassist
            Wow... this thread went to shits ;) Sorry for pooping on your thread. Maybe we should have Pasha poop on Mr. Parkerbink's hood

            Will
            not to worry, let him show how much of a clown he really is.
            i just feel bad for moderators having to clean up after babies.

            to parkerbink:
            now i just have to quote you:

            in reference to SS lines...
            Originally posted by parkerbink
            Mine were visibly fine but I had increased the pressure of the system with a new 750 mc and felt it was wise to replace the 15 year old rubber hoses.
            hmm let's see: "increased pressure", hmm aha "new 750 mc" , hm.. looks like you say that the new 750 mc had resulted in increased pressure. Which is by the way an absurd.


            Alex

            Comment

            • PeaveyBassist
              No R3VLimiter
              • Sep 2004
              • 3511

              #21
              Althogh... 750mc pushed the same distance as the stock one would create more pressure. But... the point behind the bigger master cylinder is pushing the pedal less to create the SAME pressure on the discs. So... it really depends on how far the pedal is pushed.

              Will
              RIP e30 (brilliantrot '91 325i) 11/17/06 Byebye: 8/21/07
              Welcome e30 (brilliantrot '90 325is) 12/23/06
              DaveCN = Old Man
              My signature picture was taken by ME! Not by anyone else!



              Originally posted by george graves
              If people keep quoting me in their sig, I'm going to burn this motherfucker down.

              Comment

              • static
                E30 Addict
                • Oct 2005
                • 501

                #22
                Originally posted by PeaveyBassist
                Althogh... 750mc pushed the same distance as the stock one would create more pressure. But... the point behind the bigger master cylinder is pushing the pedal less to create the SAME pressure on the discs. So... it really depends on how far the pedal is pushed.

                Will
                sorry bud but it's not exactly how it works.

                Forget Pressure for a second. Force exerted on the mc piston times the Distance traveled is Work. Golden rule is that work stays the same (constant) in the enclosed system. So by having larger area pistons on the calipers, the Distance that caliper pistons travel is less (since the volume of the brake fluid is constant) and thus the Force is more (since F*D has to be constant)

                Now think what happens when you increase the area of mc piston while having the same amount of Force applied by your foot... see it?

                Alex

                Comment

                • PeaveyBassist
                  No R3VLimiter
                  • Sep 2004
                  • 3511

                  #23
                  How would the pistons in the caliper travel less? I think about it differently. F*D of the pedal/master cylinder. bigger master cylinder = more force so distance the pedal travels is less. Am I wrong?

                  Will
                  RIP e30 (brilliantrot '91 325i) 11/17/06 Byebye: 8/21/07
                  Welcome e30 (brilliantrot '90 325is) 12/23/06
                  DaveCN = Old Man
                  My signature picture was taken by ME! Not by anyone else!



                  Originally posted by george graves
                  If people keep quoting me in their sig, I'm going to burn this motherfucker down.

                  Comment

                  • PeaveyBassist
                    No R3VLimiter
                    • Sep 2004
                    • 3511

                    #24
                    Larger piston ONLY means more pressure if the pedal is moved the same distance as the old one. Dont be a douche. kthksbye

                    Will
                    Last edited by PeaveyBassist; 01-27-2006, 10:02 PM.
                    RIP e30 (brilliantrot '91 325i) 11/17/06 Byebye: 8/21/07
                    Welcome e30 (brilliantrot '90 325is) 12/23/06
                    DaveCN = Old Man
                    My signature picture was taken by ME! Not by anyone else!



                    Originally posted by george graves
                    If people keep quoting me in their sig, I'm going to burn this motherfucker down.

                    Comment

                    • RCWells
                      Moderator
                      • Feb 2004
                      • 3589

                      #25
                      Big braking power is good stuff for those that want to stop in a timely and orderly fashion. So, I have come up with my OWN equation:

                      Stopping force x work + 23.874 (being the constant variable here) -stainless steel brake lines (less pressure exerted onto an otherwise equal field of play) x 3.14 (aka, pi) / 10, which is just a good round number that I like, x some effort on the part of the driver represented by heel pressure defined as the amount of pushing required by several leg muscles in conjunction with one another as set forth by outside stimulus translated into a nerve impulse + 69 (just another great number) = hell, i don't know, let it equal a number that you like. So, if you want a 95mm MC, get one. If you don't, don't.


                      [THE 501 club - Founding Member]

                      Comment

                      • rwh11385
                        lance_entities
                        • Oct 2003
                        • 18403

                        #26
                        wellls dstop talking out of your ass

                        parkerbrink=assclown

                        will peavey = sexy.

                        static = cool

                        dave coleman = god

                        technobabble, pg. 23 of sportcompactcar, jan '06:

                        "a bigger master cylinder will make your brake pedal firmer." ... "a smaller piston in your caliper will do the same thing"

                        i.e. if you taket hte inverse of the second fact, and you think about it, a larger piston'ed caliper will make the pedal softer, and a larger master like jordon's mentioned would be necessary to make it feel like stock.


                        and finally., if dave said it, it is true : "shiny paint is for sissies"

                        ... I'm durnk

                        Comment

                        • static
                          E30 Addict
                          • Oct 2005
                          • 501

                          #27
                          Originally posted by PeaveyBassist
                          Larger piston ONLY means more pressure if the pedal is moved the same distance as the old one. Dont be a douche. kthksbye

                          Will
                          with larger pisto you won't be able to push the pedal the same distance, unless:
                          a. you bend the pedal
                          b. you boil the fluid
                          c. you stretch the hell out of your lines
                          d. the pad goes through the rotor
                          (list is not comprehensive)

                          say the maximum amount of force you are able to apply with your foot is F, with larger piston you will have to push more than F to create the same amount of pressure in the system. (which would be impossible since F is your maximum to begin with)

                          a very good read:
                          We all know that pushing down the brake pedal slows a car to a stop. But how does your car transmit the energy from your leg to its wheels? How does it multiply that force so that it is enough to stop something as big as a car?


                          Alex

                          Comment

                          • rwh11385
                            lance_entities
                            • Oct 2003
                            • 18403

                            #28
                            okay Stefan.... in 2 years, the physics of how cars and brakes work will change. Nope. this isn't social or age wisdom related you dumbfuck, it's how cars work. You are a moron.

                            Comment

                            • rwh11385
                              lance_entities
                              • Oct 2003
                              • 18403

                              #29
                              stupidity offends me

                              Comment

                              • rwh11385
                                lance_entities
                                • Oct 2003
                                • 18403

                                #30
                                look dude, you and others are some dumbass rednecks thinking the larger master cylinder in an upgrade. it's one thing to live in your own ignorant ricer world, but another to spread such misinformation.

                                leave them be, unless you increase the size of the pistons in your calipers and need to adjust the MC size to accommodate this.

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