brakes help

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ghostrider6630

New Member
Posts
3
Location
Ipswich
Hi folks
So sorted brakes or i thought
So story was vehicle left a year with no movement starts fine but pedal yo tge floor no brakes wouldn't even pump up.
Vehicle has calipers all round on discovery axles.
I now fitted a new master cylinder and servo ezibled the brakes and it didn't work.
So went old school way and new fluid all through the pipes, and guess what , still no brakes so any you folks got an idea.
Regards
Many thanks in advance
 
Hi folks
So sorted brakes or i thought
So story was vehicle left a year with no movement starts fine but pedal yo tge floor no brakes wouldn't even pump up.
Vehicle has calipers all round on discovery axles.
I now fitted a new master cylinder and servo ezibled the brakes and it didn't work.
So went old school way and new fluid all through the pipes, and guess what , still no brakes so any you folks got an idea.
Regards
Many thanks in advance

Have you fitted the correct type/model # of brake master cylinder? They have different bore sizes...to big and there won't be enough fluid pressure to actuate the brakes :. too much pedal stroke = no brakes.

As per @Hicap phill , follow this bleed sequence first to ensure zero air in system. If still no good return to BCM and servo. It is known for a new servo to be faulty so you'll need to check for vacuum + a proper air seal between the BCM and the servo housing.

+ have you adjusted the servo to BCM adjuster rod correctly?
 
If the flexi pipes are old they may be expanding under pressure causing pedal to go down further than it should.
It would be an extreme case for pedal to go to floor but possible and worth swapping, good excuse to go braided hoses on all 5.
 
Have you fitted the correct type/model # of brake master cylinder? They have different bore sizes...to big and there won't be enough fluid pressure to actuate the brakes :. too much pedal stroke = no brakes.

As per @Hicap phill , follow this bleed sequence first to ensure zero air in system. If still no good return to BCM and servo. It is known for a new servo to be faulty so you'll need to check for vacuum + a proper air seal between the BCM and the servo housing.

+ have you adjusted the servo to BCM adjuster rod correctly?

Hi mate
You are making this sound a tough job
Yep using correct master cylinder
Hiw is the vacuum checked for? And you mention the adjustor rod adjustment? Is thus a requirement on a straight swap?
 
Seen this on a bike but not a car.. sticky caliper pistons that don't reach the disc, but move in and out as you press the pedal
Following on from this, sometimes if the wheel bearing's worn or the disc isn't running true for some reason the pistons can be forced well back into the cylinders so they've got to come out a long way to grip the disc. This gives the feeling of a lot of pedal travel.
 
Seen this on a bike but not a car.. sticky caliper pistons that don't reach the disc, but move in and out as you press the pedal

Ive had that on a car as, dry piston seals caused it on new calipers, a few drops of brake fluid as lube sorted it, took me some time to work it out.
 
Following on from this, sometimes if the wheel bearing's worn or the disc isn't running true for some reason the pistons can be forced well back into the cylinders so they've got to come out a long way to grip the disc. This gives the feeling of a lot of pedal travel.

But to have it to the extent the OP describes, it’d be outrageous wheel wobble? And stationary, that symptom doesn’t present itself in my experience.

I did have loose bearing on my wagon once though. Pedal sometimes was solid (if stationary say), but drive a few metres and it’d drop a bit further on the first application.

But it was only a little, nothing major. Bearings were fine, I just tweaked the nut slightly on one front stub axle and it’s spot on again.
 
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