Cheap master/slave cylinders on the fleebay

Duncodin

Zorg Guru (III)
Supporter
Joined
Sep 8, 2021
Points
139
Location
Pontrhydyrun - in Crow Valley
Model of Z
M44 FrankenZed
Friend of mine has an MGB. Keeps fiddling with seals on clutch slave cylinder. Car been off the road for 6 years so I'm thinking moisture likely gotten in there and rusted the cylinder bore and no end of new seals is going to help. So thinking of telling him to just buy new master and slave and be done with it.

Tons of em on fleebay cheap as chips. But are they any good? Or double, maybe 3 times as much from an mgb parts dealer - but is it likely just going to be the same part.

What do you guys reckon?
 

colb

Zorg Guru (V)
British Zeds
Joined
Nov 25, 2012
Points
178
Location
Newport, South Wales,UK
Model of Z
Z3 M43 1.8 (1999) and Z4 E85 2.5 (2003)
They probably all come out of the same Chinese factory got to be worth a pint just make sure he gets the right one either single pipe or fuel depending on car year
 

TJS

Zorg Addict
British Zeds
Joined
Aug 11, 2016
Points
49
Location
Norfolk
Model of Z
Z1
I have owned a 1968 MGB GT for 45 years (it was a 21st birthday present from a girlfriend, now wife) which has covered 54k miles from new. Three years ago I serviced the braking system on a preventative basis, rebuilt brake callipers and brake master cylinder, new rear brake shoes and rubber hoses etc etc.

Some of the earlier (square) MGB Lockheed master cylinders are no longer available which means modifying a later part or having the original rebuilt which entails shot blasting and fitting a stainless steel sleeve in the bore and new UK made rubber seals etc. The company I used for the master cylinder and brake callipers was Past Parts in Bury St Edmunds. The cost of the Master Cylinder rebuild was £95 which I thought was good value for a 57 year old part which will easily last another 57 years. Not that I will be around to find out.

You can buy pattern parts off the web for £25. However, they tend to last 2 - 3 years before they leak and fail and are not rebuildable. Given your life may depend on not having a brake failure why take the risk for cost of a tank of fuel ? If however it is your friends intention to sell the MG asap then throw a cheap part on it and it will become someones else's problem.

 

Attachments

Top