So for me the brake and gas pedals are too far off from each other in terms of height to make quick movements from the gas to brake. I have to lift my foot entirely up and back...
I am thinking of making a thicker stop to keep the brake pedal lower (adjusting the push rod accordingly of course) but that lessens the travel of the master. It may still be plenty (21mm.) I could add a spacer under the master to compensate if needed.
OR I could just take a bit out of the pedal as the top portion is almost in line with the direction of travel it would have no impact in terms of pedal ratio.
I don't have an issue with the height of the clutch pedal because its basically in line with the dead pedal/firewall area.
What have you guys done to get the pedals in an ideal location- not including Tilton etc.... not going that far.
Pete
Add something to the top of the gas pedal?
I have big feet so I never had an issue with this, but I have the other issue of having big feet in the Porsches….I need to choose my shoes carefully when I’m driving
Adding an aftermarket pedal with heel/toe extensions may help:
https://www.rennline.com/rennline-gas-pedal-perforated-porsche-sku-p44/?setCurrencyId=1&sku=P44%20BLACK
Screw a 1-1/2-2" thick piece of wood to the gas pedal. Use pine or maybe balsa so it doesn't add a lot of weight. Also easy to remove if you change your mind.
But also consider- you are looking at the gas to brake transition. What about brake to gas? Do you want to pull your foot all the way back so you can move to the gas pedal. Sometimes it is easier to just slide your foot off the brake while depressed on to the gas.
And clutch with toe/heel brake/gas may be a little interesting.
It’s a bit hard to see, but I had a little piece of hose to the brake pedal rest rod and adjusted to push rod accordingly.
I’ll report back after I good drive.
I asked about this issue once when originally working on my racing license, coach basically told me, every car is going to be a bit different, especially when you drive someone else’s car. Figure it out, make the adjustments with your feet, roll them, pivot them, move the positions you touch the pedals, with your heel, the ball of your foot or somewhere in between, sometimes even the toes… learn to drive what you’ve got, and you'll be more versatile jumping in another car.
IMO the pedal cluster in the 914 (early porsche) is one of the easiest to learn/master heel toe…. My 914s are each slightly different, as well as my 930, takes a sec to adapt when jumping from one to the other, but i haven’t made any adjustments to try and match them.
Remember, it’s an old car, sometimes things shouldn’t happen as fast is it could in a new car…
Good advice there. IMHO my 914 was more of a true heel & toe maneuver that requires me to pivot up at the ball of my foot and then my heel was right where it needed to be over the gas pedal.
I’m sure technique has to be varied based on the physical size of the driver.
Keep in mind that by reducing the stroke of the master cylinder, you have less displacement. May or may not matter based on the size of the master cylinder in relation to the caliper and pad displacement needs and the temperature they are running at. You’ll likely never need that last few CC’s of fluid displacement until the brakes are hot and faded. But when you need it, you need it.
Personally, I’d tweak the throttle pedal and its push rod before I did anything that would reduce brake displacement. The only thing worse than a car that won’t go, is one that wont stop.
I found it was pretty good on the track, you are jamming that brake really hard while blipping the throttle to down shift which puts the throttle right about where it needs to be. At least in my car. In a lighter braking street situation I do find a harder reach but it doesn't really matter in that situation.
All good points and well taken. On the track it would be just about right. My 964 is similar- with hard braking the pedal accelerator pedal is right there.
But on back roads I'm just going for smooth transitions rather than 10ths. When I do heel/toe I have to roll my foot off the brake to a degree where I get worried about it slipping off and that's uncomfortable.
The master is 21mm and there looks to be plenty of room left with the pedal mashed down hard. I haven't reduced the stoke of th4pater per say but may have reduced the stroke of the brake pedal itself.
Good point about faded and I'll keep that in mind. I have not decided that this is the answer yet and will be trying it out with all this in mind.
I have big feet so its not actually heel and toe- more like ball of the foot on the brake and pinky toe/ right edge of my foot on the gas kinda thing. Also with the stock steering wheel and shifter there is NO wiggle room for my right leg in 2nd and 3rd. Even with the Momo and Rennshifter installed though its still not quite right.
One thing I noticed is that even with the brake pedal lower the gas is a bit far off. My next thing to try is a pedal with less of a sidewards angle to it. I used the 935 style unit from rebel racing in my 964 and liked it so I might try moving that over to the 914. But I like the stock look in this car so I may make print my own.
I don’t know the details of your brake situation and/or where the front vs rear bias is at. I was assuming you were probably at 19mm master cylinder as so many cars are now if for no other reason than the fact that the 17mm stock master is no longer available.
However, it may be possible that the 21mm master cylinder is working against you by providing too much fluid displacement. It is conceivable that a 19mm master would reduce pedal force and increase pedal travel to the point that you would be happier. If you have calipers that demand a lot of displacement it’s also possible that the move to a 19mm master could leave you without displacement in reserve. The details matter.
Unfortunately the way most cars end up with modified brakes it’s sort of a “well this worked for so & so” or “ this worked on the Boxter” so it’ll be OK. Very few people have done either the basic engineering or the trial and error testing & tuning to know if they have an optimal system for their intended purposes. It’s not easy to do that testing on public roads, and it’s easy to lose sight of edge cases that matter (hot brakes, balance on wet pavement when cornering, brake balance vs load in front or rear trunk, etc.)
Long way to say that the system as built may not be right for you.
There a multiple ways to achieve the goal as you noted.
Shoes matter too. I used convers all stars on the track and it was great. On the street I often go for some Saucony hybrid trail shoes. Wider tread that grabs that break pedal better on the ball.
No doubt about that. I always drive this car with the same shoes actually. Not a well known brand but fit my feet perfectly ( a first BTW) and are thin enough to be tactile. Wider than a track shoe.
Joe Nimble trekking shoes- also German with Michelin rubber.
Meanwhile, those of us with, um, bigger feet (12EE for me) wish the brake pedal could move a little to the left. I have the center console, with the clever indent next to the accelerator, but I still can get my foot stuck trying to go from gas to brake if I am wearing normal shoes. Here's my solution, some Merrell barefoot style shoes:
Attached image(s)
Big feet here too and it’s a major problem since I live in Japan. I can only try on shoes in Tokyo!
Post to drive report: heel/toe is MUCH better with his arrangement. Amazing what a small adjustment can do. Now the pedal is just a tad too low for really hard braking. The final answer is to print a slightly thicker stop for the pedal and take the hose off.
Test grounds- this is just a short stretch. The whole course is a 2.5 hour spin (Google says 4 hours…)
21mm master cylinder is not a good choice for what you list. 19mm would be max and actually is what i have with the same calipers.
I am quoting someone else here but this was a good description:
A larger diameter master will require a shorter stroke to move the same amount fluid, thus giving a shorter pedal that requires more force and results in less feel. If you go too big with the master cylinder, the extreme case is it becomes an on/off switch and may require serious leg strength to create real friction.
So your pedal travel issue is a direct result of putting too large an MC in the system.
Gotcha – thanks!
Actually, I think the modulation on the 21 mm master cylinder is pretty good. I’m not sure I want more travel than this but you’ve got me curious so I might have to try a 19 mm just to compare.
Pete
I had a little different problem with my brake pedal. I have a 76 with the factory center console. Because the console limited my right foot placement, my size 13 feet didn’t fit on the gas pedal without dragging the right side of the brake pedal, not good. I ended up cutting the brake pedal off it’s arm and rewelding the pedal to the arm on the pedal’s right edge. I also welded a small triangular gusset from arm to pedal to keep it from bending under braking pressure. Net result is an additional inch of space for my big foot on the gas pedal, no more brake dragging…
Yeah- Momo console on my car. I’m sure I’d be hitting it if there were.
Pete
You may want to consider simply a larger wider throttle pedal? That could help solve the brake getting in the way of your foot as well. Plenty of bolt on options out there that you could use from the track world.
What about left foot braking? Then you don't have to adjust any pedals
convert it to rhd.
you are in japan?
why drive in the gutter when you don't have to.
all your problems solved (but with some added new ones. )
no dead pedal for your clutch foot thats for sure.
i forgot how i did this.
is half a lifetime ago.
but we frigged around with the loud pedal and its positioned further forward at its base of where it is left hand drive. i seem to remember we copied the crayfords car.
its great for heel and toe. just right when you are really standing on the brake with the ball of your foot. (sorry for photo, dont really take photos with an iphone when i am going flat tilt into braking for a corner!).
just never solved the old left foot problem, which is always a problem r h d.
(cept in my lovely little renault clio with its thankfully unfrench moment of non arrogance and thoughtful provision of a dead pedal on the side of the centre console, very unfrench).
what i am i saying. think i am saying find a new hinge point for loud pedal closer to the seat? i wish i could remember exactly what we did but its too long ago. i could get the pedal board off and photograph it but i am not sure its applicable to left hand drive.
there is a few other things going on with my pedal cluster as its not a rhd 911 cluster for rhd, its the original 914 pedal cluster severely screwed with, as per crayfords.
you can tell by the weird diagonal slash for the brake pedal lever. ignore that.
ignore the gently massaged wheel well too. not enough to screw with 165 tyre clearance but enough to get the loud pedal the vital few centimeters right so i did not feel like a mongoloid driving on a diagonal with a surgically enhanced left leg to work the clutch.
if you look close at the heel pad in the carpet you can see its a re-use of the original factory pad. just spot the indent for accelerator on extreme right hand side.
gives you an idea of just how weirdly different the right hand problem is.
but nothing to do with getting that angle on the loud pedal just right.
my brake pedal when braking is flush with the pas, perfect for heel and toe. Or in my case I just roll my foot over to burp the gas while down shifting. over 20 years doing this and the transmission loves it. Best, Mark
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