RS2000 wrote:SKYHI wrote:Ok, so I've now determined I can fit a prop valve in the engine bay
If you're talking about an abs/ebd car with a willwood valve next to the master cylinder, then you could physically place it in the front OR rear line. But you will only be able to
reduce the pressure between the relevant m/c piston & the abs block.
The valve needs to be on the front line(s), to move the bias to the rear.
Do you mean the valve will not affect the line pressure post-ABS block? If you do mean that, it then follows that the ABS block can both pulse for ABS,
and somehow (undetectably?) modulate line pressure for more subtle adjustments. This latter function would be news to me (on NB8B). It would also require a sophisticated pressure monitoring function across all three lines, which I rather doubt our rather agricultural ABS is capable of. As far as I know, the only sensing that happens is wheel speed.
I have read the 'EBD' references here to be along the lines of
'the ABS acts like an EBD insofar as it limits the amount of rear braking at the point of rear lock-up'. I have not noticed any 'EBD effect' at low levels of braking, nor can I see much advantage to it beyond evening out F/R pad wear.
The upshot is that I believe a Wilwood valve on the front line out of the master cylinder (and before the ABS) would work to shift the brake bias rearwards. Not having tried this, I can't 'prove' it though. However, the prop valve my now-defunct racecar, in the rear line after the ABS, worked.