Help Find Master Cylinder Flared Plugs

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StanfieldNC

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Need to test my master cylinder. Looking for metal flared plugs that thread into and block off the brake line ports.
I don't want to purchase an expensive universal kit. It seems that all kits have 9/16"-18, which I believe is GM.

Does anyone know where I can find the 9/16"-20 plug?
Our plugs are:
  • 9/16"-20 ---can't find anywhere.
  • 1/2"-20 --pretty common.
 
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Cut off fittings and lines from an old M/C. Pinch lines closed, or leave them open for M/C bleeding.
 
Cut off fittings and lines from an old M/C. Pinch lines closed, or leave them open for M/C bleeding.
Not a bad idea. Unfortunately, I need the actual plugs so as not to allow anything in order out. Need to test the piston for fluid bypass.
]I'm not convinced that pinching lines will fully seal them shut.
I don't have old lines anyway
 
If you can't find a 9/16-20 inverted flare plug, you could make it work with a 3/8-24 plug and this adapter. The 3/8-24 plug should be easy to find.
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If you can't find a 9/16-20 inverted flare plug, you could make it work with a 3/8-24 plug and this adapter. The 3/8-24 plug should be easy to find.
This is what I am considering. Wasn't sure if it would leak or not. It shouldn't be this hard. GM guys have it so easy.
 
Just stick a roofing or drywall nail into the tube with the head trimmed to fitting size, stick it into tube, screw tube/s back into m/c, tighten.
The soft heads act to plug the fitting, as you are looking for.
Use that when you rupture a line/hose on the road.
 
Just stick a roofing or drywall nail into the tube with the head trimmed to fitting size, stick it into tube, screw tube/s back into m/c, tighten.
The soft heads act to plug the fitting, as you are looking for.
Use that when you rupture a line/hose on the road.
I get this, but I want to plug the MC directly. No lines attached.
 

Those master plugs are oddball. You used to be able to buy step up/ down adapters for master fittings, if you can get on that steps to a standard plug size, then you can get a plug to fit THAT

You DO want to for certain measure the threads/ inch as some are not standard fittings

master cylinder adapter fittings
 
I got those fittings at Oreallys....the master port to a 3/8-24 so that a 3/16 hard line would screw into them. Like 4 bucks each
 
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Gotcha, - thought you might be wanting to text m/c for by-passing .

Cheers
I'm thinking my MC piston is having issues and the fluid is bypassing the piston. Pedal doesnt engage until 1/2 way and everything is new and bled well.
If I seal it, the pedal should be firm. If It isn't, I'll assume its the MC.
 
I'm thinking my MC piston is having issues and the fluid is bypassing the piston. Pedal doesnt engage until 1/2 way and everything is new and bled well.
If I seal it, the pedal should be firm. If It isn't, I'll assume its the MC.

Make sure the drum brakes are adjusted, you can use up a buncha pedal travel just moving shoes into contact with the shoes if not adjusted.
You won't get any pedal till all brakes pads/shoes are in contact with disc/drum.
Try putting on the emergency, pump brakes a few times, release and wait a few seconds, then try the brake pedal.
If the pedal seems higher, definitely adjust the drum brakes.

Good luck.
 
Make sure the drum brakes are adjusted, you can use up a buncha pedal travel just moving shoes into contact with the shoes if not adjusted.
You won't get any pedal till all brakes pads/shoes are in contact with disc/drum.
Try putting on the emergency, pump brakes a few times, release and wait a few seconds, then try the brake pedal.
If the pedal seems higher, definitely adjust the drum brakes.

Good luck.
I just finished a front brake disc conversion from another front brake kit. Everything was working fine, nice and tight, prior to the change. I'm convinced its the master.
 
Is the MC you are using for a disc/drum set up, and is it plumbed correctly through the proportioning valve? That would be the first things I would check, if you haven't already.
 
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