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Old August 2nd 2003, 17:17
Shad Laws Shad Laws is offline
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Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Stanford, CA
Posts: 125
[QUOTE]Originally posted by judgie
hhhmmmm
so what did you do?


Well, basically, you raise the gas pedal and drop the brake/clutch. There are quite a large number of ways to do it... no brain surgery here. Just take it apart and stare for awhile.

The easiest way to drop the clutch/brake is to first measure the stroke that each require, then modify/adjust the MC pushrod and the clutch cable so they only use the bottom part of the stroke, then "move up" the stop on the floorpan to hold the pedals down there, killing the dead part of the stroke on the top. One note of caution here: if you want to be really careful, you should setup the brake pedal with enough stroke to be able to brake with one circuit totally "failed." The easiest way to test this is to "bleed" the brakes - note where the pedal falls with a bleeder screw open. Of course, unless there is a 100% failure of one circuit (as opposed to a little leak), this won't be a problem.

Now, you have to raise the gas. Modify the cam. Modify the roller arm. Bend the pedal into a 90º bend, making the lower ~3/4" or so horizontal and pushing it forward. There's a myriad of ways... just take a look and see what's best for your application. If you want a more "vertical" gas pedal, then radically modifying your roller arm and cam are going to be the way to go.

Take care,
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