Ford Dana 60 Rear Disc Brake Bracket Pair, 77-84
Ford Dana 60 Rear Disc Brake Bracket Pair, 77-84
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Description
Description
Ford Dana 60 Rear Disc Brake Bracket Pair (’77–’84)
Swap your rear drums for discs on early Ford Dana 60 axles with a proven bracket setup.
The early full-float Ford Dana 60 axles (1977–1984 F-Series) used different brakes and axle flanges than later models, so they need a specific disc bracket. These brackets target those years and may work on some newer D60s with the same flange style. E-Series axles typically require modification. Some versions have a larger flange diameter that won’t clear these brackets (radiused for 3-15/16"). Check your 4-bolt flange: if spacing is the same vertically and horizontally, you need the ’76-and-older kit.
Like all our disc brackets, these are cut from 3/8" plate for strength. They’re built around ’73–’87 Chevy ¾-ton 4x4 front rotors and calipers; you may need to open the rotor throat by about 0.10"—an easy job for a brake shop. Brackets mount inboard of the 4-bolt flange with the bend toward the wheel. Requires single steel wheels, minimum 15" diameter, maximum 4" backspacing. For single rear-wheel axles.
Key Features
- Part Number: R1336
- Fits 1977–1984 Ford Dana 60 full-float rear axles
- 3/8" thick steel construction
- Uses ’73–’87 Chevy ¾-ton 4x4 rotors & calipers
- Bracket radius: 3-15/16" (check flange size)
- Mounts inboard of 4-bolt flange; bend toward wheel
- Wheel requirement: 15" steel, ≤ 4" backspacing
- Driver: R1336-01 / Passenger: R1336-02
What's Included
- Driver-side rear disc brake bracket
- Passenger-side rear disc brake bracket
Recommended Parts
- GM Dual Bleeder Loaded Brake Calipers
- Cadillac El Dorado Caliper Set with Parking Brake Lever
- Caliper options: N4674 / N4673 (later years) or N4597 / N4596 (earlier years)
- Rotor: NAPA 4885677 (’73–’87 Chevy ¾-ton 4x4 Front)
- Brake hose: H86572
Note
Bolt-on installation. For full-float axles only — not for semi-float Dana 60s. Ensure wheel studs drop freely into the rotor; do not press studs in. If hub studs are oversized, drill rotor holes accordingly. Maintain at least 5/8" lug nut thread engagement once the wheel is mounted.