Brakes
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Brakes
Ok so I warned you I might ask some stupid questions and here’s my first.
I took my car out at the weekend (loved it) and I noticed that when I stopped my foot slowly went further and further down on the break pedal to the point where the car slowly started to move, when I took my foot off and reapplied it the car was ok but repeating the above. Now somewhere in my head I have it that the reason for this is air in the break system and to clear it I need to bleed the brakes? I could be totally making that up as mechanically I’m no expert but I vaguely remember that when I was in my cortina many moons ago. Before I actually start tinkering with the brakes if any of you know the answer it would be appreciated.
I took my car out at the weekend (loved it) and I noticed that when I stopped my foot slowly went further and further down on the break pedal to the point where the car slowly started to move, when I took my foot off and reapplied it the car was ok but repeating the above. Now somewhere in my head I have it that the reason for this is air in the break system and to clear it I need to bleed the brakes? I could be totally making that up as mechanically I’m no expert but I vaguely remember that when I was in my cortina many moons ago. Before I actually start tinkering with the brakes if any of you know the answer it would be appreciated.
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Re: Brakes
Possible master cylinder replacement - Martin at CapriGear stocks them, I've just got one off him
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Re: Brakes
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Re: Brakes
As an experiment to find the possible cause, press the brake pedal a few times with the engine off. It should soon feel hard to press. If it remains soft then you could be right in that the brakes need bleeding, which is an easy and cheap thing to try, although it may be something else, as previously mentioned.
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Re: Brakes
I always thought this test was for checking the operation of the servo I.e. engine off, pedal should go hard with no vacuum assistance from the engine, have I been wrong all these years?pbar wrote: ↑Mon Jul 04, 2022 4:13 pm As an experiment to find the possible cause, press the brake pedal a few times with the engine off. It should soon feel hard to press. If it remains soft then you could be right in that the brakes need bleeding, which is an easy and cheap thing to try, although it may be something else, as previously mentioned.
Wayne
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Re: Brakes
You're not wrong Wayne, does indeed also verify function of the servo.
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Re: Brakes
Sounds like the main seal is worn in the cylinder . What you can do is ( engine running , car stationary ) is apply light pressure to pedal and note the pedal dropping as you describe , release pedal and then quickly stamp on it like your trying to break the back off your seat........if it now holds it usually indicates a worn rear piston seal ( there are two main pistons and seals in a tandem cylinder ) , if it still leaks down you most likely have a worn or corroded cylinder. The added pressure of quickly stamping on the pedal forces the outer edges of the seal out against the cylinder wall a bit more than usual.If the cylinder wall is good it will hold if its not ..... aint never going to seal . The seal is actually like a one way valve which will hold pressure in front of it but when released allows fluid from behind the seal to flow over it .........much like the leather seal in a push bike tire pump.
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Re: Brakes
Pump it hard and keep foot on the brake and start engine. It will depress slightly if the servo is OkMr B wrote: ↑Mon Jul 04, 2022 8:58 pmI always thought this test was for checking the operation of the servo I.e. engine off, pedal should go hard with no vacuum assistance from the engine, have I been wrong all these years?pbar wrote: ↑Mon Jul 04, 2022 4:13 pm As an experiment to find the possible cause, press the brake pedal a few times with the engine off. It should soon feel hard to press. If it remains soft then you could be right in that the brakes need bleeding, which is an easy and cheap thing to try, although it may be something else, as previously mentioned.
Wayne
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Re: Brakes
If it's a 2.8 I don't think Martin has them.
The other day he said he couldn't get them any more.
I do suspect a Master Cylinder though. The fluid will be leaking slowly around the seals so the continued brake pressure means the pedal gradually goes to the floor.
Look for a Granada 2.8 ATE Master Cylinder as they will fit. Martin did suggest they weren't available either but someone said they had ordered one the other day. If not you could try a new seal kit or get the current cylinder bored and sleeved.
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Re: Brakes
Ok, So as it’s the weekend I took it out again and this time I carried out the experiments you guys have suggested.
1. Engine off and pressing the brakes - all stays hard.
2. Engine on and pressing the brakes hard all ok
3. Take the car for a drive and brake hard - all ok
4. In traffic if I keep hard pressure on the brakes all ok.
5. Engine on and light pressure then it drops.
So it seems that it only does it when I brake gently or keep the pressure light the I can feel the pedal getting closer and closer to the floor. So if I’m going down hill and gently braking the it does it or in light traffic then it does it.
So does this mean it’s a worn seal? If so is that something I can do myself or does it need a more experienced guy to do it?
Thanks
1. Engine off and pressing the brakes - all stays hard.
2. Engine on and pressing the brakes hard all ok
3. Take the car for a drive and brake hard - all ok
4. In traffic if I keep hard pressure on the brakes all ok.
5. Engine on and light pressure then it drops.
So it seems that it only does it when I brake gently or keep the pressure light the I can feel the pedal getting closer and closer to the floor. So if I’m going down hill and gently braking the it does it or in light traffic then it does it.
So does this mean it’s a worn seal? If so is that something I can do myself or does it need a more experienced guy to do it?
Thanks
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Re: Brakes
galuk1 wrote: ↑Sun Jul 10, 2022 9:02 pm Ok, So as it’s the weekend I took it out again and this time I carried out the experiments you guys have suggested.
1. Engine off and pressing the brakes - all stays hard.
2. Engine on and pressing the brakes hard all ok
3. Take the car for a drive and brake hard - all ok
4. In traffic if I keep hard pressure on the brakes all ok.
5. Engine on and light pressure then it drops.
So it seems that it only does it when I brake gently or keep the pressure light the I can feel the pedal getting closer and closer to the floor. So if I’m going down hill and gently braking the it does it or in light traffic then it does it.
So does this mean it’s a worn seal? If so is that something I can do myself or does it need a more experienced guy to do it?
Thanks
I still think the master cylinder is shot, as for repairing it yourself only you can really answer that question, but as this is brakes we are talking about I would play it safe and get either a new master cylinder or have the current one refurbished by a pro.
Wayne
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Re: Brakes
I also think the master cylinder is gone - sounds pretty much identical to what was happening to my GL and that was a master cylinder change and all sorted
Cheers
Danny
Cheers
Danny
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Re: Brakes
There are companies that will refurb brake master cylinders and in fact most brake components including servos. I had some calipers done for my other classic and they came back as good as new.
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Re: Brakes
But they aint that hard to sort . Basically pull it to bits ( see you tube tutorials )check cylinder bore , clean the bits , fit new seals where the old ones were and put it back together .
Checking the cylinder bore is a really good look at it ,looking for pitting /corrosion and or scoring .
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Re: Brakes
I get what your saying but on the flipside Who wants to be a millionaire's questions are easy.....If you know the answersMc Tool wrote: ↑Thu Jul 14, 2022 7:15 am
But they aint that hard to sort . Basically pull it to bits ( see you tube tutorials )check cylinder bore , clean the bits , fit new seals where the old ones were and put it back together .
Checking the cylinder bore is a really good look at it ,looking for pitting /corrosion and or scoring .
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Re: Brakes
Very annoyingly my GL has started doing this again - I replaced the master cylinder about 18 months ago as it failed the MOT on it, however I am now having the exact same issue.
Brake pedal goes pretty much the whole way to the floor before it actually starts doing any braking. I have checked and there are no leaks I can see on the calipers or from the cylinders in the drum, is there anything else it could be before I go buying another master cylinder??
Also, is changing it easy enough to do on my own? I would guess that bleeding it all afterwards would be the most time consuming part?
Cheers
Danny
Brake pedal goes pretty much the whole way to the floor before it actually starts doing any braking. I have checked and there are no leaks I can see on the calipers or from the cylinders in the drum, is there anything else it could be before I go buying another master cylinder??
Also, is changing it easy enough to do on my own? I would guess that bleeding it all afterwards would be the most time consuming part?
Cheers
Danny
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It's me, I'm the wise man.
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Re: Brakes
For bleeding why don't you invest in one of these?D366Y wrote: ↑Sun May 28, 2023 11:51 am Very annoyingly my GL has started doing this again - I replaced the master cylinder about 18 months ago as it failed the MOT on it, however I am now having the exact same issue.
Brake pedal goes pretty much the whole way to the floor before it actually starts doing any braking. I have checked and there are no leaks I can see on the calipers or from the cylinders in the drum, is there anything else it could be before I go buying another master cylinder??
Also, is changing it easy enough to do on my own? I would guess that bleeding it all afterwards would be the most time consuming part?
Cheers
Danny
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Jack the car up on stands and start with the rear bleed nipple and then work forwards. Changing the cylinder is quite routine, you have 3 brake pipe unions to undo (11mm spanner) and the two larger ones that secure the cylinder to the servo. Undo this lot and it just pulls out but can be messy with leaking fluid which you should wash off with a watering can of water after you have finished.
Re: Brakes
When you say it`s near the floor before brakes work - are they then OK, I mean will they stop you normally? Or are they spongey? It`s a bit odd as usually the first sign of MC failure is as above, the pedal slowly sinking under light pressure (stamping will force the weak seals hard against the bore, thus sealing better)
I would definitely say bleed the entire system before anything else. (and whilst the `Eeezibleed` is fine, if you have quite a few older cars, so are likely to bleed quite often (literally!) why not invest in one of these: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Sealey-VS820-C ... 238&sr=1-3 Holds plenty more fluid, won`t fall over, no messing with tyres, built in pressure gauge and valve plus a proper heavy duty fluid cap. The Rolls Royce of bleeders?
I would definitely say bleed the entire system before anything else. (and whilst the `Eeezibleed` is fine, if you have quite a few older cars, so are likely to bleed quite often (literally!) why not invest in one of these: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Sealey-VS820-C ... 238&sr=1-3 Holds plenty more fluid, won`t fall over, no messing with tyres, built in pressure gauge and valve plus a proper heavy duty fluid cap. The Rolls Royce of bleeders?
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Re: Brakes
On the rear cylinders have you pulled back the rubber caps on the ends to make sure there is no sign of fluid thereD366Y wrote: ↑Sun May 28, 2023 11:51 am Very annoyingly my GL has started doing this again - I replaced the master cylinder about 18 months ago as it failed the MOT on it, however I am now having the exact same issue.
Brake pedal goes pretty much the whole way to the floor before it actually starts doing any braking. I have checked and there are no leaks I can see on the calipers or from the cylinders in the drum, is there anything else it could be before I go buying another master cylinder??
Also, is changing it easy enough to do on my own? I would guess that bleeding it all afterwards would be the most time consuming part?
Cheers
Danny
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Re: Brakes
Thanks Paul, bleeding the brakes or changing the fluid is admittedly something I've never done on my 10yrs of ownership - the brakes have always been fine so I've left well enough alone!
The Sealey kit does look good, but am wondering whether I can justify the cost of this is the first time I've been used one... I probably will because it will be the easiest option, biggest concern is making sure the cap it comes with is actually going to fit the master clyinder lid rather than then having imvest more money into another preasured lid.
It does bring the car to a stop yes, but I daren't drive it too far to test how well they work as I'm not sure I trust them!
I did pull back the rubber on one of them and there was no leak - I figured if the rear cylinders had gone it would be quite obvious as last time there was fluid everywhere!
I'm more surprised about needing to bleed it because it just came out of nowhere....
The Sealey kit does look good, but am wondering whether I can justify the cost of this is the first time I've been used one... I probably will because it will be the easiest option, biggest concern is making sure the cap it comes with is actually going to fit the master clyinder lid rather than then having imvest more money into another preasured lid.
It does bring the car to a stop yes, but I daren't drive it too far to test how well they work as I'm not sure I trust them!
I did pull back the rubber on one of them and there was no leak - I figured if the rear cylinders had gone it would be quite obvious as last time there was fluid everywhere!
I'm more surprised about needing to bleed it because it just came out of nowhere....
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