Greetings UK Beta Forum members,
Belated congratulations on your 50th Beta anniversary rally in 2022. I saw some pics in an Auto Italia magazine of the event. It looked like a terrific event and a fitting tribute to the 50th Beta anniversary! I wish I could have been there myself, but Australia is a long way away from UK Beta territory.
I have a few queries re choice of replacement brake parts. It looks as though the 1979 Beta Coupe has fallen victim to insufficiently frequent brake fluid changes and frequency of driving. The brakes are starting to show signs of binding. So I am in the market for replacement parts. I have purchased front and rear caliper seal kits plus two new front caliper main circuit custom made stainless steel pistons from Mark W at Betaboyz UK, on the assumption that the existing pistons will be pitted and need replacing. In theory the old pitted pistons could be machined smooth and built back up to spec with hardened chrome plating but I gather that is very expensive to do. The rear kits Mark supplied also come with a replacement (mild) steel piston.
I mentioned getting new braided stainless steel brake lines to my local mechanic who rolled his eyes and said that all of the ones they come across, (which are usually Chinese made ebay sourced jobs), leak at the union fittings, virtually without fail. I know from reading some threads here that many of you swear by UK or French manufactured Goodridge braided SS brake lines and that these perform flawlessly and do not leak. That said I might just settle for Italian made stock rubber brake hose replacements. I am open to persuasion though...
I will need a new brake compensator unit and the replacement 4 bushes that form part of the activation rod mechanism. Here I went a bit mad and was seduced into buying a brass bodied NOS brake compensator, which was much more expensive than the alloy bodied Italian made aftermarket units you can buy cheaply. The thought was that a brass bodied unit would be less likely to seize over time if the car is used infrequently, (but more frequently than of late which has probably help to precipitate the brake system binding problem!). NOS also means NOS seals though which might need to be replaced before fitting to the car? Do they wear out as quickly as their cheap alloy bodied cousins? Perhaps a newer aftermarket alloy body job with newer seals makes more sense? I now seem to recall my old Fiat factory trained mechanic who used to work on my 1981 HPE decades ago saying not to bother with a brass bodied compensator as they don`t work any better and wear out just as quickly or some such thing. I have not actually paid for the order with the brass compensator yet, so in theory I could negotiate a cancellation of that item and maybe buy something else off him that I might need.
I am also not sure what to do about a replacement master cylinder. I can buy new Italian made aftermarket from the UK for 70-80 GBP from Mark W, (brand unknown...I have not yet asked him), or Ricambio UK (Brembo). Shipping would be much cheaper with Ricambio because they have other things I would like that Mark W does not have in stock and buying it from Mark pushes me into a much higher freight cost category (>5kg) on top of what I have already purchased from him. Digression whinge: Shipping from Europe, UK or USA to Australia is now exorbitantly expensive, made worse by a pathetically devalued Australian dollar.
Or I can get an original NOS Bendix master cylinder unit, (not sure of the price yet which might be the deciding factor), which will probably be a perfect fit but will have those NOS seals again! Will the NOS brake master cylinder need to be pulled apart to check seal condition pre-installation to avoid risking premature leakage when installed? Does this undermine the benefit of a NOS original part in this instance?
Some aftermarket Beta master cylinders do seem to have fitment issues with brake lines not being able to be tightened without careful machining around the outlet ports. That was certainly the experience of a local Beta owner, (who is bonkers about Beta Coupes and owns 5 of them in various states of road and racing spec and road worthiness), whom I met recently. He is a mechanical engineer who worked in a local specialist Italian car workshop in his youth, and does all of his own Beta restoration and performance enhancement work. So I assume that the problem was with the poorly manufactured aftermarket master cylinder and not him.
The local specialist brake reconditioning firm in my home town, (Power Brakes), do a good job but charge like wounded bulls. I will get them to do the caliper overhaul work but have been advised to buy new replacement parts where possible by my local mechanic to avoid being hit with an enormous bill by Power Brakes. Hence the new master cylinder route rather than reconditioning and potentially resleeving. These are their Beta worst case scenario prices, (requiring stainless steel resleeving), FYI. Price is per caliper:
https://www.powerbrakes.com.au/shop/beta/lancia/vehicles%20h-p/page/shop/browse Anyway, I thought I would post something on here and see what the collective forum wisdom makes of it all.
Andrew