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’32 Update: E-Brake Linkage Revisited (article 42)

As I’m reassembling the car, there are some things that I think I should have explained a little better at the time of the first article.  The emergency brake handle mount is a neat little piece, but I don’t think I explained how it attaches to the floor.

e brake linkage
See that little bung at the button end of the ‘canoe’?  The bottom of that bung sits on the top surface of the bottom floor panel.  Get that?  I think you will.  I used the Lokar ratchet mechanism and incorporated it into the canoe, which drops the handle into the floor.

e brake linkage
The canoe was made from the outside section of a bent 1-5/8″ tube.

e brake linkage
This is the hole where the canoe sits.

e brake linkage
Below the 2″ thick floor, the linkage fits through a slot in the bottom floor panel.  I bent up a linkage rod required to clear the center section tube and threaded it on both ends.

e brake linkage
I drilled and tapped the Lokar brass block so it would work with my threaded linkage rod.

e brake linkage
I used a 3/8″ heim joint (or “rod end”) to support the linkage rod and also to serve double duty as the upper bolt for the transmission mount.

e brake linkage
e brake linkage
e brake linkage

e brake linkage

A little out of place, but an update nonetheless.  I put heat shrink on the wires as they exit from the frame rail and tuck in to the grille shell so they won’t stand out like… wires.