Photography by Tim Suddard
More under-hood work: We needed to install master cylinders for the brakes and clutch plus a brake light switch.
What about the stock brake master cylinder? Our car originally came with a single-cylinder master cylinder, meaning no safety margin for racing or even street use. Someone had swapped in a later dual-cylinder master from a 1967 Mustang, but it’s a heavy unit.
So we turned to Wilwood for modern, lightweight alternatives.
Starting with the brakes, we ordered a 1-inch aluminum tandem master cylinder (part No. 260-8555 and MSRP is $249.42). It should work well with our manual brake system. This piece weighs about 3 pounds, so much less than the one that we replaced.
Early Mustangs are notorious for firewall flex under hard-braking applications, so we mounted the master cylinder to a Cobra Automotive firewall brace.
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We also fitted a Wilwood proportioning valve to the side of the master cylinder. Why not a remote prop valve so we can make adjustments on the fly? We may opt for this setup at a later date but didn’t think we needed it just yet.
Now onto the master cylinder for our Tilton clutch. While Tilton makes a full line of master cylinders, we decided to keep our hydraulics all Wilwood for ease of servicing.
[Installing a real, multi-plate race clutch | Project vintage race Mustang]
We chose a ¾-inch bore compact remote flange mount master cylinder designed for tight spaces (part No. 260-10372 and MSRP is $104.70.)
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This kit comes with a reservoir mounted on the cylinder, but for ease of filling, we opted to use the included remote reservoir.
We would need a brake light switch, too, and ours also came from the Wilwood catalog (part No. 300-11181 with an MSRP of $13.78). The switch will trigger the brake lights when system pressure reaches 60 to 100 psi.
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We will get into this shortly, but we also installed Classic Tube brake lines to our new master cylinders. Once we fill our system with some fresh Wilwood XP-600 brake fluid and bleed everything, we should be good to go–well, good to stop
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