I was wondering if anyone knows if installing the brake master cylinder from a 3/4 or 1 ton truck will bolt in place. I have a 74 100 with a Dana 60 and 14 bolt. The stock master cylinder was working fine and the truck stopped with no problems. But a seal went bad and now she needs to be fixed. No one around here has one is stock to compare, so before I order one it would be nice to know. Thanks
The commonly available new master cylinder for the 100 series IH pickalls was also used on many years worth of dodge trucks and vans throughout the 70's and 80's. Including 200 and 300 series with d60 steering axles and both drum/drum and drum/disc brake systems. Any decent auto parts (and I don't mean pepo'rielshukragzone) should have your choice of new or reman on the shelf...scruu the reman stuff, go for only new in brake stuff.
With a drum/drum system, the mc pressurized through a "combination valve" which only served the purpose of providing a warning light system.
A disc/drum mc blew into a "proportioning valve" which serves an additional function, which is restricting pressure to the front brakes in proportion to the force applied in order to minimize rear brake lockup when the vehicle is not fully loaded.
If the oem master cylinder provided adequate hydraulic pressure previously, simply replace it with a comparable service part.
But...if you are replacing only the master cylinder (and not the booster as a set), you will have to re-adjust the mc pushrod between the master cylinder and the booster and that can be real tedious. Any time a replacement master cylinder is installed, the pushrod length must be verified...otherwise, you will either not be able to build braking pressure...or when the brake system becomes "warm" and underhood temps elevate, the brakes will be applied hard without pressing the pedal!
Here's a few pages from the service manual that describe the process for verifying the master cylinder pushrod "length" when replacing a master cylinder with a service part.