Mike
Organiser: North West and North Wales Premium Member
Registered: 20th May 06
Location: nr. Skipton, North Yorkshire
User status: Offline
|
I've got 2ltr fronts and standard drums on the back. Basically its had new rear cylinders and rear brake pipes and my 2ltr setup off my old car fitted on the front.
When I did all that I drained the brake fluid off to replace with new, bled it up, no bubbles but a couple of inches of travel on the pedal. I didn't get chance to bleed it again before I took it to Castle Combe so I used that as a tester which showed that the brakes seemed to work as well as I remembered on my old car but you had to take up about 2 inches of travel before they started working whereas on my old car, you didn't.
Just tried bleeding them again now. I didn't drain it because the fluid in there has only done a few miles anyway. I put about 1/2 litre of fluid through each corner, saw maybe 3 or 4 tiny bubbles in all then I've just tried the pedal again and it's still terrible
No sign of leaks anywhere.
Any ideas?
Edit: Bled with an Eezibleed both times btw
[Edited on 02-05-2011 by Mike B]
|
AlexW
Member
Registered: 25th Oct 08
Location: Essex
User status: Offline
|
Might sound silly, but I've found putting a bit of wood that pushes the pedal down over night may help.
Otherwise, Do you have the brake adjuster fitted on the rear beam? May be worth trying to move that.
|
Mike
Organiser: North West and North Wales Premium Member
Registered: 20th May 06
Location: nr. Skipton, North Yorkshire
User status: Offline
|
You mean just keep the pedal held down overnight then in the morning it's ok or rebleed again in the morning?
By the brake adjuster do you mean the auto bias thing that works off suspension height? If so that seems free
|
DERV-POWER
Member
Registered: 13th Sep 09
Location: Greenfield, Flintshire
User status: Offline
|
get rid of the load valve and fit inline ones off an mk3 astra also were the front pads new ?
|
Eddx14xe
Member
Registered: 12th Jan 10
Location: Hertfordshire
User status: Offline
|
Have you tried some hard braking?
Im sure you would already know this but when i use my brakes lightly, they have alot of travel like your describing. But after i have stamped on them a few times, they adjust themselves and there is hardly any travel in the pedal.
|
Mike
Organiser: North West and North Wales Premium Member
Registered: 20th May 06
Location: nr. Skipton, North Yorkshire
User status: Offline
|
The pads weren't new, I had them on my old car, they didn't see any use between November and April though, not sure if that would be detrimental to them?
And yes, I did 2 15 minute track sessions at Castle Combe so they've undergone some quite harsh braking but no improvement.
|
DERV-POWER
Member
Registered: 13th Sep 09
Location: Greenfield, Flintshire
User status: Offline
|
i would remove pads and check they aren't coming away from backing
|
Mike
Organiser: North West and North Wales Premium Member
Registered: 20th May 06
Location: nr. Skipton, North Yorkshire
User status: Offline
|
Just looked at the pads on the side that Ian fitted and it looks like I'm due some new ones anyway so I'll get them sorted asap and see how we get on from there.
Thanks for the advice everyone
|
john_redtop
Member
Registered: 31st Dec 08
Location: acklam middlesbrough
User status: Offline
|
ive found with mine having the hand brake realy tight 1 click makes the brakes a whole lot better also remove bias value
|
johnhara1
Member
Registered: 19th Oct 06
Location: Newcastle upon Tyne
User status: Offline
|
What are your brake lines like? The rubber bits i mean, if they're old they could be swelling up under pressure.
Replacing these on my xe, with v6 brakes, improved the pedal massively.
|
Jed D
Member
Registered: 15th Mar 11
Location: Durham
User status: Offline
|
quote: Originally posted by AW06
Might sound silly, but I've found putting a bit of wood that pushes the pedal down over night may help.
iv heard this done before, tried it in the past and didn't seem to do much though
|
corsadonk
Premium Member
Registered: 4th Jul 09
Location: Marlborough, Wiltshire
User status: Offline
|
Did you have the correct air pressure when you used the Eeziebleed?
I think it needs to be 18psi.
I know it sounds stupid, but you did it in the correct order?
|
Mike
Organiser: North West and North Wales Premium Member
Registered: 20th May 06
Location: nr. Skipton, North Yorkshire
User status: Offline
|
Yeah, I think it says between 15 and 20 psi, I thought 18 sounded nice so went with that
And yes, furthest away to nearest.
|