walshja
Jedi Warrior
Offline
ok, so I met a real nice guy at the British by the Sea car show, and he has a 1974 that he is restoring. Says his brakes don't feel right, so I offer to help him out since I had similar problems with my brakes.
I get to his garage, and sure enough the brake peddle goes right to the floor, offering minimal resistance. There are no leaks anywhere, so I decide we should flush the hydraulic system, and get some new fluid in there. I start with the passenger rear, connect my vacuum pump to the bleeder valve and we suck out some bad looking brake fluid. Repeat at all 4 corners getting the same bad fluid from each.
Same problem exists, peddle goes right to the floor like there is air in the system. So I then decide we should adjust the rear brakes to ensure the problem does not lie there. After adjusting nothing changes.
My question is where should we look next? Can I still have air in the system? Or can this be a bad master cylinder?
Using the vacuum brake bleeder, maybe we are letting air back in the system as we try and close the bleeder valve? Or would a bad master cylinder exhibit the same symptoms?
Suggestion on what to do next?
We did get his rear differential oil changed. I have never seen such dirty oil in my life, it was a thick, mud like substance that came out !!! So we did accomplish at least 1 job last night !!!
I get to his garage, and sure enough the brake peddle goes right to the floor, offering minimal resistance. There are no leaks anywhere, so I decide we should flush the hydraulic system, and get some new fluid in there. I start with the passenger rear, connect my vacuum pump to the bleeder valve and we suck out some bad looking brake fluid. Repeat at all 4 corners getting the same bad fluid from each.
Same problem exists, peddle goes right to the floor like there is air in the system. So I then decide we should adjust the rear brakes to ensure the problem does not lie there. After adjusting nothing changes.
My question is where should we look next? Can I still have air in the system? Or can this be a bad master cylinder?
Using the vacuum brake bleeder, maybe we are letting air back in the system as we try and close the bleeder valve? Or would a bad master cylinder exhibit the same symptoms?
Suggestion on what to do next?
We did get his rear differential oil changed. I have never seen such dirty oil in my life, it was a thick, mud like substance that came out !!! So we did accomplish at least 1 job last night !!!