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bigjohnie
21-07-2004, 21:33
lads i need help again,i took the master cylinder i bought two years ago out the box to fit and its the wrong one ,i dont even know what ford its off.the company who took £167 off me dont want to know so i know need a ATE CYLINDER ANY IDEAS.1980 MK2 rs2000

vinny
21-07-2004, 21:45
hi johnnie

what about gms - sorry havernt got a link, you must have seen their advert in cf.

good luck fella

bigjohnie
21-07-2004, 22:22
oh aye the noo vinny ,i will call them the morra.thanks mate :thumbup:

arron
22-07-2004, 06:48
GMS Stock them for £95 + postage :

www.gmscaprispares.co.uk

RS2000CHRIS
22-07-2004, 20:30
i am also after one.I phoned my local motor factors & they can get me one for £58+vat.ATE 1980 RS & they said it comes with a new resevoir

bigjohnie
24-07-2004, 14:31
chris, could you get me the number of factors please that seems a good price mate.gms are advertising the cylinders as 1975-77 ate .I thought that all the early ones were girling but i wiil bow to any superior rs expert.

Banishit
24-07-2004, 14:36
mines a 1980 car with ATE

RS2000CHRIS
24-07-2004, 16:54
The motor factors is called L&R Motor Parts there phone number is 01603 483427.
they are in Norwich

dasadrew
24-07-2004, 17:19
I'm pretty sure that all Ate master cylinders up to 1977 were 19.05mm bore. After 1977 they upgraded to 20.64mm. Theoretically, this should give more power to the brakes with a slightly longer pedal travel. There is a 19 or 20 on the Ate casting - ask the motor factor!

Apart from that, if you've got an Ate servo, both should fit and work. (IMHO the difference isn't worth worrying about).

If you're happy with a 19mm Ate I've got a NOS one without reservoir which you can have for £50 including postage to Britain. See what the Motor Factor offers you.

LHD cars always had Ate and I think they got into RHD cars later on depending on what was in the parts bin when the assembly line worker pulled out a brake set-up.

KL
24-07-2004, 18:08
Larger bore = less force at brakes, not more? No real experience of std m/cyls but above applies to rear wheel cyls and m/cyls in bias pedal boxes. Agree average driver will not distinguish between 19mm and 20mm.

dasadrew
24-07-2004, 20:48
You're right that I wasn't being too precise, KL! The FORCE exerted on the wheel cylinder is multiplied or reduced by the ratio of its piston area compared to the piston area of the master cylinder. By increasing the size of the master cylinder piston and retaining the wheel cylinder sizes, you get less "force multiplying" which results in less force at the wheel cylinder. However, you move more fluid down the brake line with a bigger master cylinder so the wheel cylinders hit their mark quicker, meaning (I think) that the brakes go on quicker which most daily drivers would sense as being "better" brakes. After all, if the brakes can exert enough force to lock the wheels, what more do you want in the force department?

So the 20.64mm master cylinder should give you a bit less force at the wheel, but better braking response. As you say, for the average driver this gets lost in the woods of tyre size, rubber compound, wheel diameter, road surface etc. etc.!

All the above is, of course, IMHO!!

RUDDY
26-07-2004, 10:11
The two studs on the front of the servos where the cylinder fits on are further apart or closer together so you can't swap one to the other . Or is this just the case between Girling and ATE ?

dasadrew
26-07-2004, 12:59
I think the incompatibility is between Ate and Girling and not within the respective families. I've got several Ate master cylinders - if anyone's interested I can measure some stud spacings?

When my Ate equipped LHD RS blew the servo in UK I had to change the master Cylinder and servo to Girling as it wasn't possible to mix.

bigjohnie
26-07-2004, 18:50
hopefully have a proper ATE one in a couple of days.

bigjohnie
26-07-2004, 18:54
i recieved one today but was the same as the one i already had,the bottle looks like an ATE one but it is stamped girling on the master cylinder and as paul says the holes are much wider than the ATE one.fingers crossed the new one will be o.k

dasadrew
26-07-2004, 19:55
... just as a guideline on appearance:
http://cgi.ebay.de/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=7912243637&ssPageName=STRK:MEWA:IT

If it has FAG stamped on it it's also Ate (just sub-contracted to FAG Kügelfischer)

bigjohnie
27-07-2004, 21:36
arrived today,exact cylinder to original i will post the part number in case anyone else needs one.i paid £50 but was told about £65.came with bottle and stamped ATE :cheers:

FoMoCo
27-07-2004, 22:02
http://www.redslate.co.uk/upload/pics/010046.bmp

From the ATE site.



http://www.conti-online.com/generator/www/com/en/ate/ate/general/home/index_en.html

cheeRS Gary...

bigjohnie
27-07-2004, 22:22
THE VERY ONE.Gary i am still after the water hose brackets that bolt on to air filter box above exhaust manifold if you know of any

dasadrew
28-07-2004, 05:54
Is it really the same part number? If so, it's a pre-77 19mm cylinder and has 19 stamped on the casting. Shouldn't matter too much, though - but I'd be interested as the 20mm seem to be rarer than their 19mm older relatives. Without turning to eBay, that's a pretty good price by any standard, anyway!

Who did you get it from in the end?

Happy Braking!

bigjohnie
28-07-2004, 21:00
mine was stamped 20 on the side

dasadrew
28-07-2004, 21:08
Then you've got the dog's danglies and at a bloody good price, too! Who was the company, finally?

bigjohnie
28-07-2004, 21:19
it was a nationwide company called FPS (feraris piston components).you probably seen there vans a yucky green colour ,they supply all the motor factors with their parts

bigjohnie
28-07-2004, 21:20
p.s part number LM40151 comes in a delphi lockheed box ,but is genuine ATE part.hope this helps

Banishit
28-07-2004, 22:13
bigjohnie give us a dealer mate please I dont think they come to NI

cheers
Brian