There are different boosters for 1990's vintage MB's, both single and dual chamber. The dual-chamber provide additional pedal assist ("boost") vs single. There are various levels of boost. See chart at PDF page #6
at this link, the "boost factor" shows the relative difference.
Boost factor only affects pedal effort, which is NOT the same as braking power. Too much assist means the pedal is very sensitive / touchy, which is annoying. Too little assist and the pedal requires a lot of force / leg muscle to get the stopping power you want. To get more braking power (reduced stopping distances) you need larger brake rotors/calipers, and/or different pad compound, and/or stickier tires.
Click the link below for my journey down the booster swap road from almost 15 years ago. Read the whole thread, it starts out all sunshine and lollipops, but storm clouds appear in post #2:
TLDR: Pedal feel is highly subjective, and what one person thinks is great, another may not like at all. Pad compound can seriously affect pedal feel as well. Bigger is not always better, as I learned the hard way; I had to "downgrade" to a different setup after my big MC+booster turned out to be un-modulateable (hmmm, is that even a word?) during trail braking.
E-Class (W124) - W124 brake booster & master cylinder upgrade - Hi everyone, As you may (or may not) recall, I installed early 500E brakes on my 1987 300D earlier this year (300mm front (http://www.w124performance.com/images/W124_brakes/300mm_front2.jpg), 278mm rear...
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