- Joined
- Jul 21, 2006
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- 2,756
They weren't DIY. Bought em from one of the major vendors like 200 years ago. Even have the fancy clear plastic coating encasing the braided.I'm starting to think the DIY braided lines are the issue.
They weren't DIY. Bought em from one of the major vendors like 200 years ago. Even have the fancy clear plastic coating encasing the braided.I'm starting to think the DIY braided lines are the issue.
No, I have had it backwards previously and it wouldn't hold pressure.Is the line-lock plumbed backwards?
At this point, everything is new except the frame to axle hose.What haven't you plumbed around or replaced in the front brake system?
Correct, but I was only measuring for pressure when line bypassed, not flow via volume from bleeding.I think you mentioned that you had taken the line-lock out of the system, and that had made no change?
Agreed 100%Complicate it later, get it working first.
I'm running an old school Mico. It could be failing and need a rebuild.I pulled it out and replaced it with a Mico-lock last spring and no issues bleeding it.
Will do.After all that typing- pull the line lock & bypass it and try it again is my suggestion.
Ya, I stopped that vertical bleeding nonsense after it was mentioned. Bleeder horizontal as designed....is that with the bleed screw straight up, there is actually a substantial air volume above the bleed port inside the caliper.
2500 directly at mc portI don't follow how he could have with all the parts connected- 2,000psi at the mc, 1500 psi at the flex hose but only 500 or so psi at the bleeder.
1- Back to wondering how you can lose 1,000psi (2500 dropping to 1500psi) from the fitting on the mc thru hard line only?? Correct? Or was that 1,500 psi measurement thru some flex line??
Yep, exactly what I'm thinking too.Hmmm, do you have a short metal line you can just loop de loop around to by-pass those rubber frame flex lines?
How about connecting the calipers as direct as possible to the mc ports? See if you can eliminate everything between the new calipers and the mc.
Absolutely not.Excuse me for possibly missing this earlier but how are we positive it's not the rear brakes?
At this point, everything is new except the frame to axle hose.What haven't you plumbed around or replaced in the front brake system?
Think about it this way, Brian. If the volume of fluid he has to move (arguably, not a whole lot) to take up all the clearance, hose swelling, piston motion, blah blah blah is more than he has moved when the brake pedal is bottomed, then he will never get to (1500, 2000, whatever) psi. He will only get to what he reached when the pedal bottomed. Somewhere, additional fluid volume beyond what he's getting is required. Question is what is sucking up the additional volume. I had nearly the identical brake setup for years, decades even, and never had this problem. Somewhere an evil brake gremlin is sucking up fluid volume. It's the only thing that can explain this. There is no fluid pressure regulator in the system, which would be the only other explanation.I don't follow how he could have with all the parts connected- 2,000psi at the mc, 1500 psi at the flex hose but only 500 or so psi at the bleeder.
1- Back to wondering how you can lose 1,000psi (2500 dropping to 1500psi) from the fitting on the mc thru hard line only?? Correct? Or was that 1,500 psi measurement thru some flex line??
2- How can you have 1500 psi at one end of a line and 500psi at the other end (2ft apart) when you still have liquid (brake fluid) coming out? Doesn't matter where the air is in the system there shouldn't be that kind of a drop after 3 minutes of holding your foot on the pedal. Pressure should equalize right? come on mechanical engineers...
Here's Chuzie's original 1st post:
"Trying to troubleshoot the T-Bird calipers on my 77. They SUCK, but why?
Running T-Bird up front, Explorer discs in back, 1-1/8 MC and WH Hydroboost.
2500 psi @ MC
1500 psi @ transition from hard line to caliper flex with one caliper disconnected. (note this it not at the tee above the diff but at the junction near the coil spring bucket.
500 psi @ caliper bleeder
Tried bleeding with caliper off knuckle and bleeder at 12 o'clock to ensure no air = still 500 psi
Soft line not kinked.
What are my potential culprits here? No much left but flex line, banjo and caliper.
Considered a partial blockage in the line, but that should eventually yield more than 500 psi with repeated pumps, no?"
We've got to eliminate something... flex lines are now "out" although after typing this your post popped up so the FRAME flex lines are still the old ones??? Hmmm, do you have a short metal line you can just loop de loop around to by-pass those rubber frame flex lines?
How about connecting the calipers as direct as possible to the mc ports? See if you can eliminate everything between the new calipers and the mc. Might be some funky fitting tho for the Tbird caliper.
Excuse me for possibly missing this earlier but how are we positive it's not the rear brakes?
Not sure if something I noticed when battling my brakes gremlins is related but passing it on in case useful.FAIL!
Still have 500 psi or less at the caliper.
Still doesn't stop well.
I just don't get it y'all.
One thing I did notice, before I tossed my tools across the shop, is with the line lock engaged and measuring pressure at the caliper, I can achieve 2000+psi with multiple pumps of the pedal and zero indication of bleed down over 30 seconds.
With the line lock disengaged, I can barely get to 500psi with the pedal all the way to the floor.
Also, the pedal goes all the way to the floor. Like I really have ZERO pedal feel. Not sure if that's a hydroboost thing or not. Also seems to take a couple seconds for the pedal to return.
The only thing I haven't changed is the braided line from the frame to the axle. If you recall however, I was able to achieve 2500psi measured at the tee which is when I eliminated it as a possibility.
I'm at a loss my friends.
I will check that today. Of note, I did, and have previously needed to tap the lower part of the calipers to encourage them to enter lower arm of the knuckle. They definitely don't just plop into the knuckle without resistance.I know this isn't GM brakes that are known for needing caliper clearance. But since they are oversized calipers, have you checked if there is any clearance issues to the knuckle?
Or the sliders are bound up and not traveling like they should?
I didn't have this slow pedal return when I was running manual brakes so I'm uncertain if that's a function of hydroboost or another issue in the system. I'd say it takes about 5 seconds for the pedal to fully return to rested position.When I had bad brake bleed (not hydrobleed), it seemed like brake pedal returned slow. When I finally sorted out brake bleed, it seemed like pedal returned faster.
I recall there was a need to adjust the little nipple on the end of the push rod on the vacuum boosters and a tiny adjustment could make a big difference. I didn't adjust it on the hydroboost though. Maybe that would be worth investigating.There were a few other things changed too like going from 1 1/8 to 1 1/4” MC and tightening up gap between booster pushrod to MC cup,
Not completely sure, but somewhat confident. WH told my that's the size they'd sell me for my configuration.Also, going back to a thread from @nvrstuk a long time ago. we sure your MC bore is big enough?
I'll checkEdit: you don’t have large gaps between pads and calipers post brake pedal release, correct?
Adding to the listSecond Edit: do you recall as you checked pressure further down system of the pedal went farther and farther? Might tell us something if so.
Another thought... I think it's safe to assume I've NEVER had decent brakes since acquiring the Bronco is 2000 (yes, sad and unacceptable). That said, I likely have no reference for what proper clearance and movement / travel should look like on this rig. I'm guessing I should pull the pads and make sure the caliper can move laterally, but am I looking for a certain level of resistance, or lack thereof? Paint me a picture please.I know this isn't GM brakes that are known for needing caliper clearance. But since they are oversized calipers, have you checked if there is any clearance issues to the knuckle?
Or the sliders are bound up and not traveling like they should?
How are you measuring the line pressure?