Welcome to Club Hot Rod!  The premier site for everything to do with Hot Rod, Customs, Low Riders, Rat Rods, and more. 

  •  » Members from all over the US and the world!
  •  » Help from all over the world for your questions
  •  » Build logs for you and all members
  •  » Blogs
  •  » Image Gallery
  •  » Many thousands of members and hundreds of thousands of posts! 

YES! I want to register an account for free right now!  p.s.: For registered members this ad will NOT show

 
Like Tree4Likes
  • 1 Post By Littleport22
  • 2 Post By rspears
  • 1 Post By 34_40

Thread: Brake Bleed problems
          
   
   

Reply To Thread
Results 1 to 3 of 3
  1. #1
    Littleport22's Avatar
    Littleport22 is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Little Rock
    Car Year, Make, Model: 41 Ford Pickup
    Posts
    58

    Brake Bleed problems

     



    I've bled many a brake in my lifetime, and I can't put my finger on this one. I'll try to describe as best I can and see if anyone else has solved this riddle before. This is for a new brake system on my 41 Ford Pickup

    My Master Cylinder is located under the driver floorboard, mounted to the chassis. I have a 4 port MC, but only used one side and plugged the other. I did a bench bleed with a kit and bled until no more bubbles on the two open ports. I reconnected the lines (closed to the mount for the front, furthest from the mount for rear) and bled the rear brakes first. No issues and both sides of the rear bled until clear fluid came out with no bubbles.

    Here's the problem. I get no air, fluid, anything when attempting to bleed the front. When I break the front caliper valves loose, there's no relief of pedal pressure. I disconnected the lines to see if there was an obstruction, all the way back to the primary connection at the MC. When I disconnect that one, there isn't even any fluid dripping out of the open port. So, I thought maybe the MC was bad, but I did a bench bleed again, and it is definitely blowing fluid through the rubber hose back to the reservoir. Reconnected, and same issue. I have a bleed bottle and rubber hose that I connected to the driver's caliper, and opened that valve (with fluid in the bottle). With the MC cap off, when I pump the brakes, it blows bubbles in the bottle, so no obstructions. But as soon as I put the MC cap back on, and try to bleed normally, nothing. The pedal stays firm, so there's no relief when opening the valves.

    I'm open to any and all ideas. This one stumped me.
    timkins likes this.
    It's not really work unless you'd rather be doing something else!

  2. #2
    rspears's Avatar
    rspears is offline CHR Member/Contributor Visit my Photo Gallery
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Gardner, KS
    Car Year, Make, Model: '33 HiBoy Coupe, '32 HiBoy Roadster
    Posts
    11,009

    Just a thought, do you have your pedal adjusted too tight, where it's got the rear seal for circuit 2, the one closest to the MC base, past the inlet/return port? It would just push the initial charge of fluid back & forth, building no pressure.
    -
    Master_cylinder_diagram.png
    firebird77clone and 36 sedan like this.
    Roger
    Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.

  3. #3
    34_40's Avatar
    34_40 is offline CHR Member Visit my Photo Gallery
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    New Bedford
    Car Year, Make, Model: 34 Ford 3W Coupe Replica
    Posts
    14,615

    Also, if you have a spring holding tension down on the pedal, remove it and use the spring to pull the pedal away to allow the spool in the MC to retract and open the port to the reservoir.
    36 sedan likes this.

Reply To Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
Links monetized by VigLink