It took me a little bit to get used to the toe brakes of my first T-18 - felt way different than the C-150s and hershey bars I had been flying for years. As far as the C-140 goes.....
Having flown 5 T-18s as well as my own for about 1100 hours, and am currently teaching a primary student (16 hours so far and he is almost ready for solo) in his newly acquired C-140, I can say that the two aircraft are very different when it comes to ground handling. Every T-18 I have flown has been well aligned with the main gear and had good brake setups (with one exception that had a bent rudder pedal and required a little extra finesse) The 140 I am teaching in is quite docile and a joy to fly. Landing requires very little input from my tender tootsies, while the T-18s I have flown require a little more attention. Nothing to be scared of, but I think more of a function of speed - The 140 Vref is 56 Knots and a full stall touchdown at the 3 point attitude is 44 knots (vs 58 in a T-18) The rudder of a 140 is a little bigger and the plane a little heavier. The 140 just kind of mosies (technical aerodynamical vernaculite) down the centerline after touchdown while slowing down with very little brake input. Good crosswind technique obviously helps. The T-18 needs some attention after landing as there is less weight on the tail, less rudder area and it is a little more "short coupled",,,,meaning the tail has a smaller circumference line to travel as the CG of the plane decides it wants to get in front of the main gear and go backwards down the remainder of the runway.
This is not meant to say that the T-18 is in any way difficult.....it just means that because you are going from a joyous "low and slow" high wing 85-100HP pleasure machine to a little faster, higher power to weight ratio cross country best knot per dollar speedster, you have to be a little more "out in front" of the airplane in all phases of flight, and especially on landing. Good brakes are a good thing to have.
You'll get used to it - It's like, totally more funner...