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Teach me; GM caliper brake conversion

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by Sjiefaa, Apr 27, 2010.

  1. Sjiefaa
    Joined: May 18, 2009
    Posts: 168

    Sjiefaa
    Member
    from Holland

    Experts, I call upon your wisdom......

    When spoken of ''early big piston GM caliper'' in a drum to disc brake conversion kit, which caliper are the advertisers referring to?

    Is it the caliper that was used on (amongst others) the 70-76 Camaro? Or 69-74 Nova, or.....?

    And the always used 11'' rotor?

    Anyone know?

    Thanks!
     
  2. Sjiefaa
    Joined: May 18, 2009
    Posts: 168

    Sjiefaa
    Member
    from Holland

    Nobody? I this question to noob :D?
     
  3. T.W.Dustin
    Joined: Nov 18, 2008
    Posts: 883

    T.W.Dustin
    Member

    Most folks here try to stick with drums. I believe the calipers they use in those conversion kits are 80's Monte Carlo, etc...
     
  4. bobscogin
    Joined: Feb 8, 2007
    Posts: 1,774

    bobscogin
    Member

    Yup, that's it. The '78 and later caliper is what's commonly referred to as the "metric" caliper. It was used on A and G bodies, F bodies, and S series trucks.

    Bob
     

  5. Keep
    Joined: May 10, 2008
    Posts: 662

    Keep
    Member

    It depends on the kit. One uses early calipers, the other metric.
     
  6. 4woody
    Joined: Sep 4, 2002
    Posts: 2,110

    4woody
    Member

    Just to make it more complicated: Now you can get metric calipers with oversized pistons 'cause I guess some folks felt the regular metric calipers were too wimpy for some applications.
     
  7. mrgasser396
    Joined: Mar 13, 2010
    Posts: 15

    mrgasser396
    Member
    from NEW YORK

    big gm calipers were used from 69 -77 on camaros chevelles montecarlos pontiac gto grand prix lemans olds cutlass 442 buick skylark and GS pretty much any GM intrrmediate or camaro & firebird and nova these use a 11 inch rotor. There is a difference where the brake hose bolts to the caliper on the 69 to 72 from 73 to 77 .The 78 to 88 calipers and rotors were smaller these are called metric calipers
     
  8. 64gal
    Joined: Jan 18, 2007
    Posts: 147

    64gal
    Member

    Hi, if you go to Speedway's web site and go to the brake section, you will see the different kits that they offer. If you look around, you'll see '' application '' on the page, when they are talking about a certain kit or the parts in a kit. I was looking at early gm caliper on a 11 inch roter, with ford small bolt pattern kit,brackets only. Click on application and they tell you what calipers or roters you need.Hope this helps, hope I was clear enough, regards, Tom.
     
  9. Hnstray
    Joined: Aug 23, 2009
    Posts: 12,355

    Hnstray
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from Quincy, IL

    Depends on the kit as to what is meant by "early GM big calipers". One kit I installed on my '47 Ford used GM fullsize car from '71 to '76 (Caprice, big Pontiac, Olds, Buick) on 12" rotors from a F100/150. Loved 'em..........stopped like power brakes with no booster...........using a '67/'72 Mustang disc drum M/C........

    What I have seen scanning recent ads using that term seems most often to refer to
    '69/'77 Chevelle and it's equivalents...........as opposed to the so-called metrics.

    Ray
     
  10. hipkatgreaser
    Joined: Aug 29, 2007
    Posts: 164

    hipkatgreaser
    Member

    I was thinking about the same thing with my 64 belair, and was wondering about if there is a spindle to brake conversion from a later model gm? I've got a metric monte in the back yard was gunna use for racing but lost interest and was gunna scrap it.
     
  11. I used a kit from ECI on the stock spindles on my '38 Ford pickup. It uses '73-'77 midsize GM rotors and calipers (mine came off a '76 Buick Regal). With this kit you can substitute Dodge Aspen/Plymouth Volare rotors if you want the Ford/Mopar bolt pattern instead of the GM bolt pattern.
     
  12. joe_padavano
    Joined: Jan 18, 2010
    Posts: 263

    joe_padavano
    Member

    As noted, the 69-77 calipers are larger, use SAE threads, and have a 2.75" piston. The 78-up calipers are smaller, metric threads, and use a 2.375" piston. Larger piston = larger clamping force for the same line pressure. The two do not interchange, as the space between the pins is different.

    The metric calipers were used on 11" (actually 10.75") and 12" rotors. I believe the same is true for the early calipers.
     
  13. Hnstray
    Joined: Aug 23, 2009
    Posts: 12,355

    Hnstray
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from Quincy, IL



    As an additional observation, when a given caliper is used on a larger dia. rotor it has more effective braking force as well, due to the the 'leverage' effect ............


    Ray
     
  14. Sjiefaa
    Joined: May 18, 2009
    Posts: 168

    Sjiefaa
    Member
    from Holland

    Thanks, you people rule.



    :cool:
     
  15. joe_padavano
    Joined: Jan 18, 2010
    Posts: 263

    joe_padavano
    Member

    If your real question is, can you use the Monte spindles on your 64, the answer is no.
     
  16. hipkatgreaser
    Joined: Aug 29, 2007
    Posts: 164

    hipkatgreaser
    Member

    thanks joe, but do those braket kits use the brake calipers and rotors?
     
  17. Retrorod
    Joined: Jan 25, 2006
    Posts: 2,034

    Retrorod
    Member

    The GM "big" caliper is known as the "D52" caliper.
     
  18. D52 is the part number of the Disc Pad Plate, the Friction Puck is 728, and the disc pads are numbered D52 728 by many brake parts manufacturers.
    HemiDeuce.
     
  19. You can do a really good "big" disc swap on the 58-64 Chevy x-frame cars by swapping 65-82 Corvette spindle, hubs, rotors and calipers. You will need to use the steering arms off your car with the mounting holes drilled to match the Corvette arms. The Corvette arms are shaped wrong for the passenger cars. Be careful with wheels such as Weld Lites and the like as they will rub on the caliper face. Usually cured with a 1/4" spacer and you can also grind the numbers and other crap off the caliper face. The spindle is a direct bolt on - same ball joints.

    Charlie
     

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