Bonfire night preperations and darker evenings have meant that haven't progressed very far with this but I managed to find time to strip both m/cs at the w/e. The Rover m/c measured 22.2mm (7/8) and the Vit m/c is 20.6 (13/16) so the sizes tally with the Jap m/cs. I wonder if Nicks has the larger m/c which would explain why his rear discs seem to work a bit better than mine.
As expected the construction of the Suzuki disc/drum m/c (bottom) is quite different from the Rover disc/disc m/c (top). The Suzuki m/c has a small diameter shaft running through the centre and the green valve which looks like the residual pressure valve is secured on the end of the shaft by a circlip. The spring rates seem a litttle different so it looks like the disc/disc m/c gives a longer stroke on the rear at the expense of less stroke on the front, that may be offset by the fact that the Rover cylinder is a bit longer (but the pedal travel would be the limiting factor). In my case the larger diameter of the Rover m/c will offset this, it would be interesting to see the internals of the Swift m/c. The Rover m/c just has two pistons and two springs, the piston for the front chamber has a slot in the middle and a pin runs through it to prevent the piston coming back into the rear chamber.
I have found out that Rover 820s and MGFs have a three port m/c so I am trying to track one of those down, should be a bit bigger tooÂÂ
The other surprise was how little was holding the Zuk m/c together, you can see in the pic that the Rover m/c has two moulded in clips on the plastic cover and a circlip underneath holding the piston in. The cover on the Zuk is a press fit with no circlip underneath, so it relies on the mounting bolts to hold it together.