This is a long post, so the TL;DR is that I made the clutch and brakes better.
Long version: I drove the Beetle 3-5 times a week in July and August and didn't really do much more sorting as other chores (and racing) beckoned. But a few weeks ago, as I pulled out of a parking lot, I heard a snap and the clutch wasn't right. I'd been expecting something as the pedal never felt right and the floorboard stop was missing from the pedal. At one point, I did try to adjust it so that I could put the floorboard stop in (it's there for a reason...stay tuned), but I couldn't get it to fully disengage. Someone had done inappropriate things and I hoped to sort them out before something broke. There was also over an inch of brake pedal freeplay and the pedals didn't line up properly.
I figured I'd broken the clutch cable as that's fairly common thing, so I ordered one up along with new parking brake cables (one was broken and replacing in pairs makes sense to me) and waited for a few free moments to sort it all out.
I pulled the pedal assembly to change the cable and found the cable in tact, but the pedal damaged. It looks like it had broken before and someone welded it up. I don't know if that's why the pedal stop was missing, or if the missing pedal stop broke the pedal before, but it wasn't right. I could have welded it up again, but since the pedal ratio looks somewhere between 6:1-8:1, if I didn't get it angled perfectly, the pedal could have ended in a weird place. So I decided to replace the pedal.
This is my first car, a 1968 Beetle. It was my sister's first car, my brother's first car, and then my first car. My dad bought it for my sister out of a VW junkyard (Dale's VW Repair) in Iowa. Dale would take people out in the yard, and point to a couple of decent shells to build into cars. My dad picked this one. Dale rebuilt it in Lego fashion using other junked Beetles, painted it, sold it to my dad for $1000, and we used it from 1974-1984. It's the first car I ever drove, the first car I took the engine out of, and the first car I painted. Rust and 178,000 miles got the better of it, so I put it in storage in 1984 as it had too much history to scrap. I don't know if I'll every restore it, but I still have my first car. Occasionally, I take a part or two from it and I figured its clutch pedal would like to be used again.
As long as I'm down this rabbit hole, here's a little more. I painted the car when I was 15 but fixed the rust mainly with body filler, rivets, and body filler. By the time I was 18, I had learned to weld, so I started welding up the trim holes and planned to fix all the rust and make a Cal Look Beetle. But I realized it would be better to just buy a better Beetle. So I bought an MGB/GT, but that's another story. Anyway, I just put the Beetle away wet and it's like a time capsule. Whenever I move it or grab a part, I open up the glovebox, which has a combination of receipts, high school papers, and miscellaneous wrappers. I put everything back for the next time.
If I ever do restore it, the Holland High parking permit will stay.
Back to the long, boring clutch thread. It took some real heat to get the clutch pedal off of the 1968 pedal assembly, but I got it. A quick sandblast and rattle can black came next.
I decided to replace the clutch cable as preventative maintenance, then replaced the parking brake cables. As long as I had the rear brakes apart, I checked the wheel cylinders and found them weeping a little. So I replaced them. Since the rears were slightly weeping, I checked the fronts. One was fine and one was weeping. I replaced them both so I could be done with it.
The guy who messed up the clutch pedal must not have understood how pedals need to be adjusted as the master cylinder pushrod wasn't right and the jam nut wasn't near where it should have been. The jam nut wasn't necessary as there was just enough corrosion to seize the pushrod. Nonetheless, I cleaned everything up, greased it for the future, and adjusted the pushrod to have about 1/4" of freeplay at the pedal.
Getting the pedal assembly in is a bit of a dance, and then there is a spring for the brake pedal return. I've done a ton of these so I don't bleed anymore.
The clutch pedal has a floorboard stop again.
The pedals feel great, they line up, the brakes are adjusted just right, the parking brake works, and the car is just a little nicer to drive.
I have about 4-6 weeks of driving season left and I've never had a Beetle with working heat. This one has everything to have working heat, but the cables to the heater boxes are broken and the tubes from the engine to body aren't installed. I'm going to fix that so I can finally experience a Beetle with heat. Stay tuned.