Quit stomping on that pedal so hard!
That's an odd break. Usually they seem to fray and stick before they just break. If anything, maybe the aftermarket pedal needs a travel limiter?
Man I'm just granny shifting, I let off the throttle and everything

The stock plastic quadrant didn't last long after I bought it, haha.
The pedal assembly is stock with an aftermarket aluminum quadrant and a firewall adjuster. But I don't think there is a stop.
While I had cable out I checked cam alignment through cable hole and it is off quite a bit. So I think cable was chafing along the sharp edge of cam. There was slack in the assembly so long ago I shimmed it tighter to keep it from rattling. Looks like shim stack needs to be moved to the other side, although may need different size shim with larger ID. So I blame this failure on
improperly installed aftermarket equipment.
Racked the car and swapped in the new cable. Kind of an up-and-down type job but still easier on my old man body with a lift (and A/C).
The old cable was not adjustable in length on the clutch end. New one is which is nice. This is one of my later versions of TOB free play devices. At this point it is doing nothing as there is no spring pressure, so I removed it. McLeod RTX dual disc inside which has half the pedal effort of stock. It does chatter at low RPM lug due to how the inner floating plate is secured. Upgraded the T56 with a 26 spline input shaft. It holds the 700 ftlbs on nitrous and will survive 6k clutch drop on slicks.
The new cable's firewall end was different and needed minimal mods to work with firewall adjuster. Got everything installed, adjusted and tested. Stopped for the night, but need to address the cable alignment issue before it's done.
