Good thinking. Stopping is important.
Before we go any further, I want to ask why you think it needs upgrading. My personal truck will lock all 10 tires at speed.................. and that's with a 100% stock system with old airpacks. If the stock braking system exceeds the capacity of the tires, what good will additional stopping power do? This sounds smart alecky, but it isn't.
A lot of people say the brakes on these vehicles needs upgrading, but I think they must have trucks with brake system problems because when the system works right, it is extremely effective.
Like the posts above, the main reason for me (M51A2) to want to upgrade before going on the road is the
single circuit. The problem is not that in itself the brakes are not good enough to stop the truck when all is OK.
The basic problem is that even a new system can blow a seal or break a flex hose. When that happen, you have a lot of dead weight on today's quick-moving unforgiving
PUBLIC roads.
These trucks were designed for war-time situations slow moving, in a time that most passenger cars had single circuits as well, where much sturdier and there was less traffic anyway. These trucks were made to drive, not to brake. Today, with our MV hobby, we go out on public roads in traffic moving much more quicker, drivers not paying attention (phones, texting), and lots of kids running around getting in front of cars while playing.
I will gladly install a second MC and airpack from these trucks and make it dual; even today the individual components are good enough for the trucks to use in daily traffic.
As to the
single circuit system, what was good enough 60 years ago today just does not cut the cake anymore.