wrknrott said:James... I'm with you there! What I'm asking and not just you in particular, is with my ABS not working (not in the braking loop) I have way too much <b>bias</b> to the rear brakes! Yes, I can control it through my applied pressure, but I'm not achieving maximum braking efficiency.
I have no problem with bypassing the ABS controler, but it seems that most of you are doing this to gain braking bias to the rear? No? I seem to already have too much!
And I am refering to first gen braking... . "1992"
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Thats part of the problem of bypasing the system, you loose the automatic bias. I am firmly convinced the only reason ABS was added to these trucks WAS to keep the rear tires from locking up under braking. It's a pain when it doesn't work right and even worse to trouble shoot, but, when it works correctly it is good.
What you need is a bias controler like the racers use to adjust between the front and rear and balance the the braking. These trucks simply don't have enough brake surface to lock the front under good traction and the rear is way too light with something to control the bias. Once you can adjust the balance you can set the rear up so it will brake hard but not slide the tires at the first stab. Takes some $$ and some time but it works pretty well once it is done.