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It could also be the design differential front/rear pressure ratio of the proportioning valve. My '87 was built with JB5 brakes. Braking was so poor that you would pray you were going to stop in time with the pedal nearly mashed through the floorboard! Very scary! I'm surprised there was never a recall. The brakes stayed that way until I reconfigured them. Now, it stops on a dime!
This probably doesn't apply to your truck, but didn't some of these trucks have a load sensing valve that would limit pressure to the rear wheels unless there was a load in the bed?
The only other way to test without throwing parts at it is, (you need a gauge that checks line pressure though), start at back on one side and work your way up to the master cylinder, checking each side one by one. This method is APITA. But that is the way to determine what exactly is wrong....
Replaced master cylinder, wheel cylinders,adjusted brakes,and there is more than 1/4 inch of shoes left.It still can't stop the rear at idle.I can stop the rear with the parking brake.
They do have a rubber hose.I had my son hit the brakes while I held the line and it didn't swell