My 96, with 4WABS :{ is giving me brake fun again. This time it's got new lines, SST hoses, rotors, calipers, cylinders, etc. as part of a kind of reconditioning process
All of this post is in reference it static testing in the garage; no road testing or driving yet since the upgrades.
The symptoms are described in several threads on this site but it doesn't seem like anyone followed up with what actually fixed it
. I get a good firm petal on the intial push and then the pedal just falls to the floor under any foot pressure at all. You can pump it and the process just repeats. It only does this while it is running, I assume because the booster applies much more force than my leg.
The prescriptions in the threads generally go as follows: Master Cylinder, brake booster, RWAL valve, leaks, and too much air in the system.
The system was pressure bled and I don't believe there is any air in it. Even if there was, that would make for a spongy pedal but not falling away.
The master cylinder sounded like the problem to me. But rather than start throwing $130 parts at the problem I made some master cylinder plugs (directions on making the plugs are below) for the ports on the master cylinder and with both ports plugged the pedal is hard as a rock no matter how long I hold pressure on the pedal; no falling away. With just the rear port (services the front brakes/ ABS snafu) blocked the falling pedal is there nice and solid with no falling. With just the front port (rear brakes) blocked the pedal falls away.
I interpret those results to mean: 1) the master cylinder is good and should not be replaced with a new mastercylinder, especially a rebuild which could be worse than the original. 2) The rear brake circuit is good because with it connected the pedal was nice, 3) the front circuit is loosing pressure somewhere. Since there are no leaks and the fluid is incompressible it must be accumulating somewhere. I suspect the ABS is leaking to an internal accumulator, even though it has been electrically disconnected for several years.
The brake booster seems to work perfectly as the pedal performs well and I don't know why that would make it fall the vacuum is built up when I press the pedal initially. I reconnected the ABS fuse and both the red "BRAKE" light and the yellow "ABS" light behave normally. No change with ABS connected.
At this point I am looking at buying flaring tool and splicing the lines around the ABS unit, leaving the RWAL valve intact physically but not electrically.
Anyone else had this problem? What am I missing or does it sound like I'm on the right track?
Scott
MASTER CYLINDER PORT PLUG INSTRUCTIONS
To make port plugs for the 19 4x4 master cylinder go to Napa and buy one 813-1156 adaptor and one 813-1157 adaptor. You can cut the tube about an inch or two away from the tube nuts that fit the master cylinder ports, put some solder in them, give them a crimp, and then melt the solder from the outside while holding the flared ends up. These would also be good to make bleed lines that loop back to the reservoir, like they show the manual. They cost about $3 each.

The symptoms are described in several threads on this site but it doesn't seem like anyone followed up with what actually fixed it


The prescriptions in the threads generally go as follows: Master Cylinder, brake booster, RWAL valve, leaks, and too much air in the system.
The system was pressure bled and I don't believe there is any air in it. Even if there was, that would make for a spongy pedal but not falling away.
The master cylinder sounded like the problem to me. But rather than start throwing $130 parts at the problem I made some master cylinder plugs (directions on making the plugs are below) for the ports on the master cylinder and with both ports plugged the pedal is hard as a rock no matter how long I hold pressure on the pedal; no falling away. With just the rear port (services the front brakes/ ABS snafu) blocked the falling pedal is there nice and solid with no falling. With just the front port (rear brakes) blocked the pedal falls away.
I interpret those results to mean: 1) the master cylinder is good and should not be replaced with a new mastercylinder, especially a rebuild which could be worse than the original. 2) The rear brake circuit is good because with it connected the pedal was nice, 3) the front circuit is loosing pressure somewhere. Since there are no leaks and the fluid is incompressible it must be accumulating somewhere. I suspect the ABS is leaking to an internal accumulator, even though it has been electrically disconnected for several years.
The brake booster seems to work perfectly as the pedal performs well and I don't know why that would make it fall the vacuum is built up when I press the pedal initially. I reconnected the ABS fuse and both the red "BRAKE" light and the yellow "ABS" light behave normally. No change with ABS connected.
At this point I am looking at buying flaring tool and splicing the lines around the ABS unit, leaving the RWAL valve intact physically but not electrically.
Anyone else had this problem? What am I missing or does it sound like I'm on the right track?
Scott
MASTER CYLINDER PORT PLUG INSTRUCTIONS
To make port plugs for the 19 4x4 master cylinder go to Napa and buy one 813-1156 adaptor and one 813-1157 adaptor. You can cut the tube about an inch or two away from the tube nuts that fit the master cylinder ports, put some solder in them, give them a crimp, and then melt the solder from the outside while holding the flared ends up. These would also be good to make bleed lines that loop back to the reservoir, like they show the manual. They cost about $3 each.