After converting to disc brakes front and rear on my 73 FJ40 and running the stock master and booster for years, I decided an upgrade was in order. So I purchased a dual diaphram 8" booster and a 1 1/8" Wilwood disk brake master (without check valves). I bled the master back into itself until all bubbles were gone, before connecting up the brake lines. I made sure the front lines go to the larger reservoir on the master. I Bled each caliper thoroughly about five times now. Haven't gotten any bubbles in last several tries, so I'm confident there is no more air in the lines.
When I press the pedal down it goes fairly easily about 1/2 way to the floor then stops solid (as if a block of wood was between the floorboard and the pedal). Braking action is far from adequate. Pumping the pedal won't help. At that point no further braking action will happen no matter how hard the pedal is pushed. If I open one of the front bleeders at that point the pedal will continue nearly to the floor.
At this point I am stymied. The only thing I may look into tomorrow is the push rod length, only because that's all I can think of left to check.
The front calipers and rotors are off an FJ60 I believe, and the rears are the typical chevy conversion.
Any ideas on how to troubleshoot this?
When I press the pedal down it goes fairly easily about 1/2 way to the floor then stops solid (as if a block of wood was between the floorboard and the pedal). Braking action is far from adequate. Pumping the pedal won't help. At that point no further braking action will happen no matter how hard the pedal is pushed. If I open one of the front bleeders at that point the pedal will continue nearly to the floor.
At this point I am stymied. The only thing I may look into tomorrow is the push rod length, only because that's all I can think of left to check.
The front calipers and rotors are off an FJ60 I believe, and the rears are the typical chevy conversion.
Any ideas on how to troubleshoot this?