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"Rocky" - 1981 F250 Restoration


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I haven't used speed bleeders, but at ~$15/pair from what I see online they'd be well worth it. However, you said your castings are quite rough. Did the speed bleeders not suck air around the threads? I see that they appear to have some form of thread sealer, so does that really work?

Actually it was the bleeders that were rough. The threads look like they were rolled around in sand or something. I'll try to get a good pic tomorrow. I did actually try the teflon tape trick but just couldn't get a good seal. I did not try grease or other things folks usually use. Mostly I was kind of already looking for an excuse to try something new, so...

I've read reviews that say these speed bleeders don't have "enough" sealant but they were on older versions that did look in photos like they only had sealant on 3-4 threads. The ones I got, the sealant was more like 7-8 threads. That must do the trick because these seemed to work fine.

But I think they would work even without sealant. Think about it, with normal bleeders if you want to go solo you usually use a vacuum pump - that's what I was doing. You draw like a 20-25psi vacuum on the bleeder then crack it. But now you have this huge vacuum right at the bleeder port so if there's even the tiniest leak around the threads, air is going to flow better than fluid and you get bubbles.

With these speed bleeders you're back to the old brake pedal method, "pushing" the fluid down to the cylinder. The MC doesn't suck fluid back to it, mostly it's just the return springs pushing it back. Since there's no strong vacuum being developed, I think you'd need little to no sealant to keep air from getting back in. Whatever token amount is there is probably more than enough.

For what it's worth while these do let you go solo I think it's still worth having an assistant if you can manage it. It's still easier than crack-step-hold-close-release-crack-step-hol.... over and over but with an assistant you can get a better look at the fluid flow so you know when the bubbles are out. Saves having to dump half a bottle of fluid "just to be sure"...

BTW I did get new soft lines for the front-left/front-right/rear-center but decided not to replace them just yet. It was too cold today and I think my lines are end of life but not a "tomorrow" project. I got all the parts - new washers, bolts, clips, lines, etc, but I noticed especially on my rear center connector that the 3/8 flare fittings are in really bad shape. I'm worried about breaking one because I don't have the materials or tools right now to repair those. So probably I'll wait and order some new hard lines as well and replace all the lines at once.

Until then these parts are small. I think I can just keep them in an "emergency repair kit" in the truck with those plus a (new, sealed) bottle of fluid. I'll keep a sharp eye on them for any signs of leaks over the next few months, and if I have to do a field repair I can manage it. I won't be driving the truck much, mostly just to a few shops for things like draining the R-12 from my A/C. I'll re-visit this in April or May once the weather warms up a bit more.

Oh! The bleeders were rough! I missed that.

But instead of tape I’d use thread sealant goo. It doesn’t set up nor peel off.

Anyway, sounds like the bleeders work well. Good to know. And your plan seems good as well. :nabble_smiley_good:

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Oh! The bleeders were rough! I missed that.

But instead of tape I’d use thread sealant goo. It doesn’t set up nor peel off.

Anyway, sounds like the bleeders work well. Good to know. And your plan seems good as well. :nabble_smiley_good:

Yeah, I never really got a good pic but the threads were very rough. Hard to explain. I didn't have any teflon paste on hand (my tube had cracked and dried out) and teflon tape didn't seem to help. But anyway the speed bleeders did well.

Had a win-some-lose-some day today. I managed to get some Torklift mounts on my RAM to carry the camper (hoping to pick it up this week). But Rocky is still not street-ready.

First, I had thought I fixed my high idle by plugging in that wire under the dash, but all was not to be. I've run the truck a few more times over the past week or so and it was still idling high. I brought out my DMM and wasn't measuring 12V on that red wire anymore.

There must be some mystery to what's going on, but I was kind of tired of dealing with it at this point. Having it idle at 2000rpm once warmed up makes it really hard to drive because the synchros are already pretty worn, so you need to come to a COMPLETE stop to get it in 2nd. Looking for a quick temporary fix, I just tossed an add-a-circuit fuse into the fuse block on a hot-in-START/RUN circuit (heater/AC), ran a wire out through the firewall and threw a FastON connector on the end. Plugged that into the choke heater and boom, problem solved for now. I didn't put a switch on it because this is a temporary solve but at least it idles at like 800rpm now.

Next I tackled the brakes. Or I thought I did. I had my son help me bleed the system not because the speed bleeders don't work but just so I could watch the line until the air was out. Why waste more fluid than I have to. It seemed to go OK and we had a firm pedal (and I couldn't rotate either wheel by hand) by the end of it so I threw the wheels back on and got the truck back down off the jack stands.

I wish I hadn't done that. My parking brake, the entire reason for pulling this all apart, still doesn't work. The regular brakes work fine but on even a moderate hill the truck rolls easily if only the parking brake is set.

Researching forum posts here and elsewhere it seems like a common complaint about these Dorman brake cable replacements is that they aren't quite "right". As some others have posted, my left/right cables don't come out of their sleeves the same amount so the adjuster doesn't hang level. And perhaps they aren't moving enough to engage the brakes fully. I can definitely step on the pedal and get it to the second position, but no matter how much I set the adjuster it doesn't seem to hold anything.

Sadly it seems like the only option is to pull the wheels, hubs, and drums back off again and look at the parking brake levers. I guess they're supposed to have a certain amount of travel, and a common complaint about these Dorman replacements is the springs/ends are too long so they don't travel the right amount. Anybody have any other ideas? I'll definitely do it if required but boy what a shame, I had them all lubed and sealed up...

Anybody have a source for a cable replacement other than Dorman? That's all I could find and they don't seem "right". They enter the drums at a different angle and with a different attachment than stock, their ends are different left vs. right (despite their book saying this is the correct part), etc. It's hard not to assume they're the problem...

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Yeah, I never really got a good pic but the threads were very rough. Hard to explain. I didn't have any teflon paste on hand (my tube had cracked and dried out) and teflon tape didn't seem to help. But anyway the speed bleeders did well.

Had a win-some-lose-some day today. I managed to get some Torklift mounts on my RAM to carry the camper (hoping to pick it up this week). But Rocky is still not street-ready.

First, I had thought I fixed my high idle by plugging in that wire under the dash, but all was not to be. I've run the truck a few more times over the past week or so and it was still idling high. I brought out my DMM and wasn't measuring 12V on that red wire anymore.

There must be some mystery to what's going on, but I was kind of tired of dealing with it at this point. Having it idle at 2000rpm once warmed up makes it really hard to drive because the synchros are already pretty worn, so you need to come to a COMPLETE stop to get it in 2nd. Looking for a quick temporary fix, I just tossed an add-a-circuit fuse into the fuse block on a hot-in-START/RUN circuit (heater/AC), ran a wire out through the firewall and threw a FastON connector on the end. Plugged that into the choke heater and boom, problem solved for now. I didn't put a switch on it because this is a temporary solve but at least it idles at like 800rpm now.

Next I tackled the brakes. Or I thought I did. I had my son help me bleed the system not because the speed bleeders don't work but just so I could watch the line until the air was out. Why waste more fluid than I have to. It seemed to go OK and we had a firm pedal (and I couldn't rotate either wheel by hand) by the end of it so I threw the wheels back on and got the truck back down off the jack stands.

I wish I hadn't done that. My parking brake, the entire reason for pulling this all apart, still doesn't work. The regular brakes work fine but on even a moderate hill the truck rolls easily if only the parking brake is set.

Researching forum posts here and elsewhere it seems like a common complaint about these Dorman brake cable replacements is that they aren't quite "right". As some others have posted, my left/right cables don't come out of their sleeves the same amount so the adjuster doesn't hang level. And perhaps they aren't moving enough to engage the brakes fully. I can definitely step on the pedal and get it to the second position, but no matter how much I set the adjuster it doesn't seem to hold anything.

Sadly it seems like the only option is to pull the wheels, hubs, and drums back off again and look at the parking brake levers. I guess they're supposed to have a certain amount of travel, and a common complaint about these Dorman replacements is the springs/ends are too long so they don't travel the right amount. Anybody have any other ideas? I'll definitely do it if required but boy what a shame, I had them all lubed and sealed up...

Anybody have a source for a cable replacement other than Dorman? That's all I could find and they don't seem "right". They enter the drums at a different angle and with a different attachment than stock, their ends are different left vs. right (despite their book saying this is the correct part), etc. It's hard not to assume they're the problem...

Oh dont get me started on the Ebrake cables.

I dont remember who the first set came from or who made them but the spring was so long it hung down below the backing plate so there was no way the drums would go on.

I cut the spring shorter just so I could get the drums on but I think they are still to long and coil bind as it dose not hold vary good.

I got a second set again dont remember from who or made them and the spring also looked too long.

I never took them out of the package.

I just got a set from Rock Auto think Raybestos or Wagner and the springs look like they will work.

I have not installed them yet so cant say for sure on the fit. I can check on who makes them tomorrow.

Dave ----

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Oh dont get me started on the Ebrake cables.

I dont remember who the first set came from or who made them but the spring was so long it hung down below the backing plate so there was no way the drums would go on.

I cut the spring shorter just so I could get the drums on but I think they are still to long and coil bind as it dose not hold vary good.

I got a second set again dont remember from who or made them and the spring also looked too long.

I never took them out of the package.

I just got a set from Rock Auto think Raybestos or Wagner and the springs look like they will work.

I have not installed them yet so cant say for sure on the fit. I can check on who makes them tomorrow.

Dave ----

Yeah report back here if you have any input? I saw the Raybestos but between Rock Auto and others they wouldn't be here for another 10 days. I was able to get the AC Delco ones (188386 and 188387) should be delivered in the next 4-5 days so I figured I'd give those a try.

If I'm pulling off my drums, I'm taking out those Dorman cables either way. When I do I'll post measurements. Sadly I threw out my factory cables, the trash service was rolling up the street and I was stuffing every little bit I could into the cans. Wish I'd saved them for reference... If anybody still has their stock cables it might be a good number to know in the archives... (Total length of each cable plus length from end of brake-housing clip to end of spring...)

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Yeah report back here if you have any input? I saw the Raybestos but between Rock Auto and others they wouldn't be here for another 10 days. I was able to get the AC Delco ones (188386 and 188387) should be delivered in the next 4-5 days so I figured I'd give those a try.

If I'm pulling off my drums, I'm taking out those Dorman cables either way. When I do I'll post measurements. Sadly I threw out my factory cables, the trash service was rolling up the street and I was stuffing every little bit I could into the cans. Wish I'd saved them for reference... If anybody still has their stock cables it might be a good number to know in the archives... (Total length of each cable plus length from end of brake-housing clip to end of spring...)

I had nothing to go by on my truck so when I got the new cables I figured I was good to go ..... wrong!

On the length of the new cables I also think the inner part were to long as I had to take up (shorten) the front cable besides the spring.

As I was typing this it just hit me I may have cables on the parts truck axle, thing is getting to it as it was pushed under the Gremlin and stuff piled around it :nabble_smiley_uh:

Will see about going out to the garage, 25*f here after it being in the 70's, to see who the latest cable are made by and part numbers.

I will also try and dig through my binds and find the 2nd set of cables, who made them and part numbers too.

Dave ----

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I had nothing to go by on my truck so when I got the new cables I figured I was good to go ..... wrong!

On the length of the new cables I also think the inner part were to long as I had to take up (shorten) the front cable besides the spring.

As I was typing this it just hit me I may have cables on the parts truck axle, thing is getting to it as it was pushed under the Gremlin and stuff piled around it :nabble_smiley_uh:

Will see about going out to the garage, 25*f here after it being in the 70's, to see who the latest cable are made by and part numbers.

I will also try and dig through my binds and find the 2nd set of cables, who made them and part numbers too.

Dave ----

Ok first the truck

81 F100 Flare side rear drum brakes size? large bolt pattern.

The rear Ebrake cables I dont know who I got them from but the springs that push the arm back were way to long and could not get the drums on.

20160530_131321.jpg.e8a8bdbb442223f81fcc6f5f439ce3f4.jpg

The cable set I just got from Rock Auto are Raybestos

BC93343 & BC93232 and both have springs that measure 5.5"

The other set I bought but thought the spring were also to long are Raybestos

Note this is for the van not the F1xx truck see below

BC93524 & BC93014 and both have springs that measure 6"

I did not lay them out to get a length of inner & outer cables as they are still wire tied in the boxes and dont want to open up all the way just yet.

I dnot know why the different part numbers as I am sure I ordered all cables for my truck based on what the web site had posted.

The plan is to use the 5.5" springs cables and hope they work better than the spring cut ones I have on the truck now. Again I think I am getting coil bind as the pedal will not go any more but the truck can still be moved forward and if on a little hill backwards it will roll.

For what its worth hope this helps others.

Dave ----

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Ok first the truck

81 F100 Flare side rear drum brakes size? large bolt pattern.

The rear Ebrake cables I dont know who I got them from but the springs that push the arm back were way to long and could not get the drums on.

The cable set I just got from Rock Auto are Raybestos

BC93343 & BC93232 and both have springs that measure 5.5"

The other set I bought but thought the spring were also to long are Raybestos

Note this is for the van not the F1xx truck see below

BC93524 & BC93014 and both have springs that measure 6"

I did not lay them out to get a length of inner & outer cables as they are still wire tied in the boxes and dont want to open up all the way just yet.

I dnot know why the different part numbers as I am sure I ordered all cables for my truck based on what the web site had posted.

The plan is to use the 5.5" springs cables and hope they work better than the spring cut ones I have on the truck now. Again I think I am getting coil bind as the pedal will not go any more but the truck can still be moved forward and if on a little hill backwards it will roll.

For what its worth hope this helps others.

Dave ----

I did a little more digging on the cables I listed the part numbers for and happy I got the last set from Rock Auto as they were listed for my truck.

The cable set I just got from Rock Auto are Raybestos

BC93343 cable lengths 60.380 / 47.625 80 to 91 F100 & F150

BC93232 cable lengths 93.250 / 80.432 80 to 83 F100

The other set I bought but thought the spring were also to long are Raybestos

Note this is for the van not the F1xx trucks

BC93524 cable lengths 54.440 / 38.125 80 to 91 E100 & E150

BC93014 cable lengths 66.880 / 51.000 80 to 91 E100 & E150

So I will need to mark the boxes that are in the parts bin for what they fit as I will forget if I have not already LOL

Dont know how I got ones for a van?

Dave ----

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I did a little more digging on the cables I listed the part numbers for and happy I got the last set from Rock Auto as they were listed for my truck.

The cable set I just got from Rock Auto are Raybestos

BC93343 cable lengths 60.380 / 47.625 80 to 91 F100 & F150

BC93232 cable lengths 93.250 / 80.432 80 to 83 F100

The other set I bought but thought the spring were also to long are Raybestos

Note this is for the van not the F1xx trucks

BC93524 cable lengths 54.440 / 38.125 80 to 91 E100 & E150

BC93014 cable lengths 66.880 / 51.000 80 to 91 E100 & E150

So I will need to mark the boxes that are in the parts bin for what they fit as I will forget if I have not already LOL

Dont know how I got ones for a van?

Dave ----

Thanks for the detail! I'll post back on mine once the new ones arrive. I now have the Dorman, with the ACDelco on their way. That should give us data on several options.

Today was a progress-not-progress kinda day. I started by looking up more tuning options for the Holley Street Warrior now that I have a handle on the high idle not coming off. I made three more adjustments: I adjusted the choke itself to "come off later" (one notch), the high idle up a quarter turn, and the curb idle up a quarter turn. My emissions label calls for 1750 and 600 for these, respectively. I'm at 1600 and 700 so I may tweak it some more but you can only test it when the engine's cold so I figured I'll tweak it a bit more later this week. Typical Colorado - the one day I need it to be cold (bear in mind it was low-20s all last week) it was sunny and 63!

I did a little more wet sanding and buffing on the passenger side. I'm not ready to post a pic yet but I'm pretty happy with how it's coming out. Honestly, if you don't want a showroom finish, I think you can go pretty far with rattle cans and the right wet/dry sandpaper, plus a decent polisher and the right compound. There are plenty of rough spots but only in places where I ran out of patience and energy. It was good enough to feel like progress, anyway.

Next task was back to the brakes. I was pretty enthusiastic about the Speed Bleeders on the rear brakes but ran into a problem on the fronts. They aren't long enough. They bottomed out on the threads/nut before sealing against the inner sealing face so when I had my wife step on the pedal, brake fluid sprayed everywhere! And this was on a day I'd actually bothered to lay out my pig mat (LOVE that product btw) but it sprayed so far it missed the mat entirely. Sigh.

Over to the bench with the old bleeders, I can't get stopped another few days. I worked on them for about 15 minutes with brake cleaner, tiny drill bits, picks, and dremel brass brushes (to clean up the threads) and was finally able to get them reasonably clean and passing air/fluid without blockage. If you don't have covers on your bleeders get some, they're worth it!

After that I went around twice bleeding all the brakes the "old way". After about 1.5qts I finally felt like everything was running completely clear/clean and bubble-free, and we had a hard pedal so I topped off the MC and called that done.

On a whim I decided to try the parking brake once more so I fired it up, reversed up off the chocks about a foot (I'm parked facing downhill in my driveway at the moment), applied it firmly and let it settle. Nope, rolls right back down. I'll table this until I get the new cables.

When I first bought this truck, while I was replacing the wheels I inspected the front disc brakes pretty closely and everything seemed fine, but I didn't pull the calipers off. Given the circus that was the rear drums and bearings, I went ahead and ordered a bunch of front-wheel bearings, seals, and so on. I probably won't tear into there in the next few days, but it's definitely on the radar.

Next major job is fixing leaks. I have an oil leak somewhere and while it's not massive (a few drops a day I would judge) it's a problem in an uptight suburban neighborhood with an HOA. :nabble_smiley_thinking: I've been using Chomp Pull it Out to deal with it so far (if you've never tried this stuff it's amazing) but that can't last forever. The big fear is a rear main seal but I don't think it's that, actually. There's noticeably wet/oily leakage around the rear (near the steering wheel) corner of my driver's side valve cover. I got new valve cover gaskets from LMC on the way but I'm also debating replacing the whole cover. It's an aftermarket Edelbrock which is fine but I would NOT put it past the previous owner to have thrown on some junkyard find, maybe without even cleaning it up. I would not be shocked at all if there was a ding or scratch back there.

 

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Thanks for the detail! I'll post back on mine once the new ones arrive. I now have the Dorman, with the ACDelco on their way. That should give us data on several options.

Today was a progress-not-progress kinda day. I started by looking up more tuning options for the Holley Street Warrior now that I have a handle on the high idle not coming off. I made three more adjustments: I adjusted the choke itself to "come off later" (one notch), the high idle up a quarter turn, and the curb idle up a quarter turn. My emissions label calls for 1750 and 600 for these, respectively. I'm at 1600 and 700 so I may tweak it some more but you can only test it when the engine's cold so I figured I'll tweak it a bit more later this week. Typical Colorado - the one day I need it to be cold (bear in mind it was low-20s all last week) it was sunny and 63!

I did a little more wet sanding and buffing on the passenger side. I'm not ready to post a pic yet but I'm pretty happy with how it's coming out. Honestly, if you don't want a showroom finish, I think you can go pretty far with rattle cans and the right wet/dry sandpaper, plus a decent polisher and the right compound. There are plenty of rough spots but only in places where I ran out of patience and energy. It was good enough to feel like progress, anyway.

Next task was back to the brakes. I was pretty enthusiastic about the Speed Bleeders on the rear brakes but ran into a problem on the fronts. They aren't long enough. They bottomed out on the threads/nut before sealing against the inner sealing face so when I had my wife step on the pedal, brake fluid sprayed everywhere! And this was on a day I'd actually bothered to lay out my pig mat (LOVE that product btw) but it sprayed so far it missed the mat entirely. Sigh.

Over to the bench with the old bleeders, I can't get stopped another few days. I worked on them for about 15 minutes with brake cleaner, tiny drill bits, picks, and dremel brass brushes (to clean up the threads) and was finally able to get them reasonably clean and passing air/fluid without blockage. If you don't have covers on your bleeders get some, they're worth it!

After that I went around twice bleeding all the brakes the "old way". After about 1.5qts I finally felt like everything was running completely clear/clean and bubble-free, and we had a hard pedal so I topped off the MC and called that done.

On a whim I decided to try the parking brake once more so I fired it up, reversed up off the chocks about a foot (I'm parked facing downhill in my driveway at the moment), applied it firmly and let it settle. Nope, rolls right back down. I'll table this until I get the new cables.

When I first bought this truck, while I was replacing the wheels I inspected the front disc brakes pretty closely and everything seemed fine, but I didn't pull the calipers off. Given the circus that was the rear drums and bearings, I went ahead and ordered a bunch of front-wheel bearings, seals, and so on. I probably won't tear into there in the next few days, but it's definitely on the radar.

Next major job is fixing leaks. I have an oil leak somewhere and while it's not massive (a few drops a day I would judge) it's a problem in an uptight suburban neighborhood with an HOA. :nabble_smiley_thinking: I've been using Chomp Pull it Out to deal with it so far (if you've never tried this stuff it's amazing) but that can't last forever. The big fear is a rear main seal but I don't think it's that, actually. There's noticeably wet/oily leakage around the rear (near the steering wheel) corner of my driver's side valve cover. I got new valve cover gaskets from LMC on the way but I'm also debating replacing the whole cover. It's an aftermarket Edelbrock which is fine but I would NOT put it past the previous owner to have thrown on some junkyard find, maybe without even cleaning it up. I would not be shocked at all if there was a ding or scratch back there.

Progress!!!! Loving it!

Yes, there are steps backward, but you are making more steps forward than backward, so it is progress. :nabble_smiley_good:

On the front discs, you can rebuild the calipers for next to nothing. The casting is usually fine and you just need a new piston and seals. That's it.

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Progress!!!! Loving it!

Yes, there are steps backward, but you are making more steps forward than backward, so it is progress. :nabble_smiley_good:

On the front discs, you can rebuild the calipers for next to nothing. The casting is usually fine and you just need a new piston and seals. That's it.

I'm considering it. For now I may hold off a little while. As near as I can tell this truck only ever HAD front brakes for the last N-thousand years of its life. For sure the rears were doing nothing, they were missing half their shoe linings and the wear marks suggested only a portion of what was left was doing anything at all.

So far the pattern with this truck has been "If it's old/original, it may need service/inspection. If it's been serviced, it was probably done wrong and needs a total rebuild."

This should be a big week. The weather is warming up which makes for more "work on it" time, and I also will hopefully be picking up Bullwinkle:

tl1.jpeg.6cb5d1760694918a184b6f36848b4b5c.jpeg

Since I got the mounts installed on the RAM (who I shall henceforth be calling Mr. Peabody), I'm going to use that to go pick the camper up (assuming the credit union gets all their stuff sorted out tomorrow). But long term, the camper will spend more time with Rocky than Mr. Peabody. As is appropriate...

 

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