Brake Pedal Fade

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by DavidB, Dec 27, 2004.

  1. DavidB

    DavidB Guest

    If I press on the brake pedal of my 2002 CR-V with moderate but steady
    pressure, I can get the pedal to go all the way to the floor. I
    replaced the master cylinder and the pedal still acts the same. I am
    curious how many other owners can get their brake pedal to fade to the
    floor if they try. Try it and let me know.
     
    DavidB, Dec 27, 2004
    #1
  2. DavidB

    r2000swler Guest

    You have a very bad and risky situation.
    Either your new master cylinder is defective,
    or you have a leak somewhere.
    If you have a leak, there will be a puddle of
    brake fluid under the leak.
    New parts, even OEM are sometimes dead
    out of the box.
    When you push hard, the little bushing in the
    peddle flares out and doesn't let fluid sneak
    past. But a slight steady preasure will show if that
    cup shaped bushing is bad.
    I had a 1968 VW bug and I rebuilt a master cylinder.
    I was on a budget, and was able to get the car cheap
    because of the defective brakes. My dad told me it would
    be simple to fix, but insisted that teh car be towed and
    not driven to our home.
    The old bushing was only about half the length of the
    new one, and was worn smaller then the tube diameter.
    Terry
     
    r2000swler, Dec 28, 2004
    #2
  3. DavidB

    John Horner Guest

    This is not normal. You either have a leak or a defective master cylinder.
    Where did you get the replacement? There are many shoddy rebuilt parts on
    the market.

    John
     
    John Horner, Dec 28, 2004
    #3
  4. DavidB

    jim beam Guest

    you have a serious problem. while it's possible for the new master
    cylinder to be defective, it's very unusual. much more likely, you have
    air in the system, especially as you've had the problem both before &
    after a change of master.

    bleed the system properly. using the correct wheel sequence, have an
    assistant pump the pedal hard 3 times, then after the 3rd stroke, with
    full pressure on the brake pedal, you open the bleed nipple and have
    your assistant press the pedal all the way to the floor. repeat until
    all wheels bleed clear unfrothy fluid. pay close attention to the
    reservoir level to make sure it doesn't drop too far. don't scrimp on
    the brake fluid - make sure you use a decent quantity to ensure the
    whole system is fully flushed.
     
    jim beam, Dec 28, 2004
    #4
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