Talking of brakes, get under the drivers sill and check your brake bundle. There is 4x brake pipes with a 5th one in the middle of the bundle which is the evap pipe from the tank to the charcoal can in the front nearside corner.
The evap works like this..
Petrol vapour pressure builds up in the tank and it gets evacuated down the pipe all the way to the charcoal can where a solenoid opens a valve and the petrol vapour is sucked into the throttle body to be burned. This is a US environmental thing, not required in the UK and means your fuel cap is non-vented.
Problems?
The evap pipe runs over the axle on the nearside and gets corroded and blocks up, resulting in a 'whooosh', letting out the pressure when you open the petrol cap.
What I did?
When I replaced my brake pipes with Kunifer pipe (copper/nickel alloy), I removed all of the evap pipe and the charcoal can and associated valves, vacuum pipe and solenoid and plugged up the port at the throttle body. Sounds complex but if you take a good look, it isnt really.
At the tank end, I replaced the pipe with a simple "roll over" valve so that it shuts off in case I'm inverted. This valve allows the tank to breathe normally.
Check the straps along under the sill where the brake pipe bundle is supported as this is where the corrosion starts.
If yours are ok, clean them up with a soft wire brush and paint on some rust remover product. Then coat later with something like Waxoyl (I use Bilt Hamber products for dealing and preventing rust).
The only other places rust might be a problem is the petrol pipes (offside sill) and the autobox coolant pipes to the radiator or oil cooler if you have one.
The steel petrol pipes come from the tank, over the axle and down along the sill. Check this area of the petrol pipes for corrosion as they are exposed here. Again, if they are ok, clean and paint them.
The autobox coolant pipes also corrode so the same treatment here.
This is important as you cannot reach the autobox fittings (I'm contemplating cutting a hole in the trans tunnel near the passenger seat to access these pipe fittings from inside!), so dropping the box to replace the steel pipes (my current problem!

) is one way of accessing these fittings, but I have an angle grinder and I'm not afraid to use it!!

The alternative is to cut back these steel pipes and fit 5/16th (7mm) Gates hydraulic autobox replacement cooling hose which I could not find in the UK and had to buy a 25' length from Rockauto (only need about 10'!)
So, if your autobox pipes are good, clean, derust and paint as soon as you can.
It helps if you have mate with a ramp or lift, I dont, and have to wrestle under my Corvette with drive on ramps!

Good luck!