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Dual single resevoir master cylinders?

ChryslerKid

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At one of the shops on my route today I see a cool 66' dodge truck. I go to check it out and notice it has two side by side single master cylinders with a hard vacuum line off the top of the intake feeding a brake booster under the dash. Is there any real advantage to doing it this way? Im guessing this was the same engineer that implemented the left hand thread lugnuts.

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Picture worth a thousand words but in this case more questions. Pictures under dash? Are both for brakes or is one for a clutch arrangements? Needed more room in engine compartments for PB booster?
 
I didnt take a picture under the dash but I was talking to the owner of the shop(one of the best mechanics I know). No clutch it was an automatic 4x4
 
Also i dont think ive ever seen under the valve covers of a poly 318. Straight exhaust rockers with diagonal intake rockers... just odd

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The one master cylinder is for the clutch. The leaver you saw was probably a three on the tree. The automatic trans had a shifter on the dash.

Three on the tree...
1966-Dodge-D100-02.jpg


Automatic...
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Mid sixties Dodge trucks did have a master cylinder for the hydraulic clutch. I had a 65 model D100 with a slant 6 that had that setup. I bet that truck has been changed, and the old cylinder left in place on the firewall. (Probably to mess with people that ask the question.. LOL)
 
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