i am so glad you posted this! i am going to search to see if there is an existing thread about this and if there isn't i will make one. your problem is exactly what i am experiencing. i have a 1971 dart swinger. it was a 4 wheel drum brake car. i upgraded it to a lbp front disc setup and the rear was kept as a drum but it was upgraded from 10x2' to 10x 2 1/2' rears. well i have a bad rear brake lock up problem. it stops greak from 20 to 25 mph but above that it wants to swap ends on me. i was thinking a new portion valve might fix it until i read the article here :
http://68cuda.com/disk.html. towards the bottom it says
"
BRAKING IMBALANCE
Having fat front rotors is a treat. I can now almost out brake most cars on the road. However there is a common problem with this setup that is easily remedied. The back brakes tend to lock up before the front brakes which is not good (fishtail in the rain). Solutions below:
1) My 8 3/4 from a Fury cop car with 11" drums uses a 15/16" rear wheel brake cylinder. Look closely at your rear end as you may have the same size, if you are unsure change it anyway as cylinders are $9.00 or so and why not put new ones in your car. If you swap out to a 7/8" or 13/16" version (old mopar P.N.# 2530136) the rear brake action will be lessened. These wheel cylinders were supposedly used on vans and trucks in the 80's."
a light went on with me then. i also found this article as well from mopar action:
http://www.moparaction.com/tech/archive/disc-main.html
further down it says:
"
There are other ways to alter front/rear balance. One way, which reduces rear lockup, is to use a 7/8-inch rear wheel cylinder in place of the standard 15/16-inch unit. Try
Raybestos part number WC37236 for this. (Original application: late 70-early 80s light-duty Dodge trucks w/10-in. rear drums).
The second variable is caliper piston size. The slider-type calipers used on 1973-75 A-bodies used a smaller piston: 2.60" as opposed to the more common 2.75". Using these can be helpful if your car has a reverse proportioning problem and tends to lock the fronts first, usually only a problem with no-option, slant-six cars or lightened drag cars.
well i am going to do this when i get the chance and see if it fixes my problem. again i am going to post this in a new thread. if this is common knowledge to everyone else here well....i guess i missed it, but at least i know now!