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Re: Spit Brakes - Pressure differential valve

To: leblancm@brooktree.com (Chris LeBlanc), triumphs@Autox.Team.Net (Triumphs)
Subject: Re: Spit Brakes - Pressure differential valve
From: muntsb@HiWAAY.net (Bill Munts)
Date: Wed, 22 Jan 97 20:55:56 GMT
References: <32E678C7.228F@brooktree.com>
Hi Chris,

The PDWA valve also closes the system that has failed.  The valve is basically 
a shuttle valve.  If one system (front or rear) were to fail the shuttle will 
shift to close the failed system and maintain function in the other system.  
The valve is shaped much like an H with the shuttle in the middle.  If for 
example, you have a line fail on the rear system, the pressure differential 
from the front (normal pressure) to the rear (no pressure) will cause the 
shuttle to shift to the low pressure side.  What this all means is that you can 
have a line failure (or cylinder) and still have brakes on either the front or 
the rear.  

I wouldn't bypass this valve, half of a braking system is much better than no 
braking system.

Good Luck

Bill M.
'70 MkIII Spitfire


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