For those of you who have not seen the drawings of these in the parts books, this disk brake design is similar to a clutch and pressure plate, not the modern caliper style. The brake pad disk is squeezed between the metal disk and a "pressure plate." Any body know of a working example, whose owner may want to share his experiences? Any idea of the total production quantities? Dave Homstad 56 Dodge D500 > -----Original Message----- > From: Mark Allen (Marshfield) [SMTP:MarkA@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] > Sent: Wednesday, January 12, 2000 11:41 AM > To: L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: [FWDLK] Disc Brakes > > The first year Chrysler offered disc brakes was 1950. They were offered > on > the Town and Country and the Crown Imperial long wheelbase sedans. They > were manufactured (If memory serves) by a company named Lambert. A > somewhat > complicated set-up, I understand they worked well, when they worked. > Power > brake booster sat under the floor for these cars, disc or drum. Booster > was > essentially Offered through 1954 for sure, skeptical about 1955. They > took special wheelcovers that sat out from the wheel so that air could > reach > them to cool them down, much like the 67-69 Imperial wheelcovers. |