[90 Accord] Master or Wheel cylinders going?
Hi there,
1990 Accord EX, 189k, well maintained. Recently the brake pedal will fade (close) to the floor: about 1/3-1/2" of play left once it's down there. PA winter, was about 45F today when it happened(so not abnormally hot). Only happens on slow braking. If, after I have stopped, I hold me ebrake and pump the brake pedal, the stiffness returns within 1-1/2 pumps. Hard braking is OK, just slow that give me trouble. I have read here that this is most likely the master cylinder(internal leak), because there is no loss in fluid-it is solid. How can I tell it is the master cylinder and not a rear wheel cylinder(rear drum, front disc)? Remanned from AdvanceAuto is ~$50. How hard are these to rebuild(I'm fairly mechanically inclined, just never done one before). Also do I need to bench bleed the new master before installing it(I had to on my '92 Nissan). Thanks folks! -Jamie |
Re: [90 Accord] Master or Wheel cylinders going?
klijam64@email.pct.edu wrote in
news:1107564985.906170.291660@g14g2000cwa.googlegr oups.com: > How can I tell it is the master cylinder and not a rear wheel > cylinder(rear drum, front disc)? Pull a wheel (and drum as required). Leaks will be blindingly obvious. If a disc leak is bad enough, fluid will be flung around on the inner face of the tire. If a leak is due to a rotted line, you'll get staining on your driveway. And maybe a little pee-stream underneath when you stomp the pedal. Does the pedal eventually go to the floor if you hold the pedal long enough? Are you _sure_ there's no fluid level drop...? -- TeGGeR® The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ www.tegger.com/hondafaq/ |
Re: [90 Accord] Master or Wheel cylinders going?
If it's a wheel cylinder, there would be leakage at the wheel, and fluid
loss. If your fluid level hasn't changed, it's the master cylinder. All master cylinders are suppose to be bench bled, but I prefer not to. The risk is that you may have a bad one and not know it until it's in the car... But if the two bolts are easy to get to I bolt it in and fill the reservoir. I plug both )Or all) ports with fingers and have someone gently pump the pedal until I get pressure and fluid from a port. Then I attach that line and repeat until all lines are in place. Done correctly, you won't have but a small bit of air (or even none). -- Stephen W. Hansen ASE Certified Master Automobile Technician ASE Undercar Specialist <klijam64@email.pct.edu> wrote in message news:1107564985.906170.291660@g14g2000cwa.googlegr oups.com... > Hi there, > 1990 Accord EX, 189k, well maintained. Recently the brake pedal > will fade (close) to the floor: about 1/3-1/2" of play left once it's > down there. PA winter, was about 45F today when it happened(so not > abnormally hot). Only happens on slow braking. If, after I have > stopped, I hold me ebrake and pump the brake pedal, the stiffness > returns within 1-1/2 pumps. Hard braking is OK, just slow that give me > trouble. I have read here that this is most likely the master > cylinder(internal leak), because there is no loss in fluid-it is solid. > How can I tell it is the master cylinder and not a rear wheel > cylinder(rear drum, front disc)? > > Remanned from AdvanceAuto is ~$50. How hard are these to rebuild(I'm > fairly mechanically inclined, just never done one before). Also do I > need to bench bleed the new master before installing it(I had to on my > '92 Nissan). > > Thanks folks! > -Jamie > |
Re: [90 Accord] Master or Wheel cylinders going?
Steve/Tegger, I'll just respond to you both at once.
TeGGer® wrote: > Leaks will be blindingly obvious. Yeah I've pulled all the wheels, and everything is dry as ever... usually brake fluid will stain suspension parts and is pretty noticable... that being said, the fluid in the resovour is really dark, perhaps it's time for a flush and change anyways. Are Honda's really as picky about their fluid's as my brother leads on(he's been a mech. at honda for a while), or can I get away with plain 'old DOT3(minus silicon)? > Does the pedal eventually go to the floor if you hold the pedal long > enough? Are you _sure_ there's no fluid level drop...? I didn't thoroughly test every situation, but it seemed to continue to go to the floor as long as I was slow about my pedal pressure, and 'stopped' at a light in traffic. When I returned and parked in my driveway, still running, I was really stabbing the brake pedal, but it remained solid/stiff(trying to induce or force a leak...) As mentioned above, there may be a *slight* drop in fluid, but since my resovour is so dirty it might be hard to notice. Certainly nothing noticable. > The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ > www.tegger.com/hondafaq/ Just checked out the FAQ: wish I had know about it earlier! Steve wrote: > I prefer not to. The risk is that you may have a bad one and not know > it until it's in the car... I'm not sure I follow you: is the risk the inconvenience of bench bleeding it first only to find out it is bad anyways? What's are some tell-tale signs that a MC is bad-from-the-box? Not too long ago my friend put a NAPA remanned on a neon that was no good. I'm just wondering if it's worth the hassle. Thanks for your responses! I'll be sure to post back w/any updates. |
Re: [90 Accord] Master or Wheel cylinders going?
klijam64@email.pct.edu wrote:
> Steve/Tegger, I'll just respond to you both at once. > > TeGGer® wrote: > >>Leaks will be blindingly obvious. > > > Yeah I've pulled all the wheels, and everything is dry as ever... > usually brake fluid will stain suspension parts and is pretty > noticable... that being said, the fluid in the resovour is really dark, > perhaps it's time for a flush and change anyways. Are Honda's really as > picky about their fluid's as my brother leads on(he's been a mech. at > honda for a while), or can I get away with plain 'old DOT3(minus > silicon)? plain old DOT3 or 4 will work. 5 is the silicone stuff. supposedly, honda *brake* fluid isnt all that great. maybe due to the time it spends sitting on the shelves at the honda dealerships? |
Re: [90 Accord] Master or Wheel cylinders going?
Mike,
Just to clarify, you can get any 'grade' brake fluid w/silicon. Good point about the brake fluid. |
Re: [90 Accord] Master or Wheel cylinders going?
Have a 91 Accord and had this same problem but in the summer when it got
very hot outside, this was corrected with a new master cylinder. Have also had a leaking wheel cylinder but the pedal stays hard as normal. <klijam64@email.pct.edu> wrote in message news:1107564985.906170.291660@g14g2000cwa.googlegr oups.com... > Hi there, > 1990 Accord EX, 189k, well maintained. Recently the brake pedal > will fade (close) to the floor: about 1/3-1/2" of play left once it's > down there. PA winter, was about 45F today when it happened(so not > abnormally hot). Only happens on slow braking. If, after I have > stopped, I hold me ebrake and pump the brake pedal, the stiffness > returns within 1-1/2 pumps. Hard braking is OK, just slow that give me > trouble. I have read here that this is most likely the master > cylinder(internal leak), because there is no loss in fluid-it is solid. > How can I tell it is the master cylinder and not a rear wheel > cylinder(rear drum, front disc)? > > Remanned from AdvanceAuto is ~$50. How hard are these to rebuild(I'm > fairly mechanically inclined, just never done one before). Also do I > need to bench bleed the new master before installing it(I had to on my > '92 Nissan). > > Thanks folks! > -Jamie > |
Re: [90 Accord] Master or Wheel cylinders going?
On 4 Feb 2005 16:56:25 -0800, klijam64@email.pct.edu wrote:
>Hi there, > 1990 Accord EX, 189k, well maintained. Recently the brake pedal >will fade (close) to the floor: about 1/3-1/2" of play left once it's >down there. PA winter, was about 45F today when it happened(so not >abnormally hot). Only happens on slow braking. If, after I have >stopped, I hold me ebrake and pump the brake pedal, the stiffness >returns within 1-1/2 pumps. Hard braking is OK, just slow that give me >trouble. I have read here that this is most likely the master >cylinder(internal leak), because there is no loss in fluid-it is solid. >How can I tell it is the master cylinder and not a rear wheel >cylinder(rear drum, front disc)? Sounds like the MC except they usually exhibit this behavior in warm weather, not cold. Yours may be more gone than you think, especially with that many miles on it. > Remanned from AdvanceAuto is ~$50. How hard are these to rebuild(I'm >fairly mechanically inclined, just never done one before). Also do I >need to bench bleed the new master before installing it(I had to on my >'92 Nissan). Not much to lose if you can find a rebuild kit. |
Re: [90 Accord] Master or Wheel cylinders going?
klijam64@email.pct.edu wrote:
> Steve/Tegger, I'll just respond to you both at once. > > TeGGer® wrote: > >>Leaks will be blindingly obvious. > > > Yeah I've pulled all the wheels, and everything is dry as ever... > usually brake fluid will stain suspension parts and is pretty > noticable... that being said, the fluid in the resovour is really dark, > perhaps it's time for a flush and change anyways. Are Honda's really as > picky about their fluid's as my brother leads on(he's been a mech. at > honda for a while), or can I get away with plain 'old DOT3(minus > silicon)? it's master cylinder then. don't use dot 5 unless you replace every seal in the system, including the proportioning valve. even then, it's not recommended unless used in seriously wet conditions as it has a lower boiling point. > > >>Does the pedal eventually go to the floor if you hold the pedal long >>enough? Are you _sure_ there's no fluid level drop...? > > > I didn't thoroughly test every situation, but it seemed to continue to > go to the floor as long as I was slow about my pedal pressure, and > 'stopped' at a light in traffic. When I returned and parked in my > driveway, still running, I was really stabbing the brake pedal, but it > remained solid/stiff(trying to induce or force a leak...) As mentioned > above, there may be a *slight* drop in fluid, but since my resovour is > so dirty it might be hard to notice. Certainly nothing noticable. fluid gets darker when it absorbs moisture. when the system is bad enough for the rubbers to start deteriorating, the detritus washes back into the chamber blackening the fluid. > > >>The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ >>www.tegger.com/hondafaq/ > > > Just checked out the FAQ: wish I had know about it earlier! > > Steve wrote: > >>I prefer not to. The risk is that you may have a bad one and not know >>it until it's in the car... > > > I'm not sure I follow you: is the risk the inconvenience of bench > bleeding it first only to find out it is bad anyways? What's are some > tell-tale signs that a MC is bad-from-the-box? Not too long ago my > friend put a NAPA remanned on a neon that was no good. I'm just > wondering if it's worth the hassle. > > Thanks for your responses! I'll be sure to post back w/any updates. > bench bleeding for a honda is not critical - they bleed easily. [vital for some other cars tho]. assume the new cylinder is good. to bleed, a fudge is to replace the cylinder & connect the brake lines, but not tighten fully. you can then bleed in situ only tightening the lines after they stop bubbling without having to bleed the whole system, but that is NOT text book. /correct/ procedure is to bleed the whole system per tegger's faq's. again, do NOT attempt this shortcut unless you know what you're doing. very important: have a gently running hose handy when bleeding. wash any spillage with plenty of water. if you get it on the paint work, DO NOT WIPE - wash only. even if it looks like paint's coming off, just wash & keep gently washing for a few minutes. then go back into the house for an hour. when you come back out, the paint will look like there was never a problem. unlike if you stay there & get tempted to touch it "just to see" if it was ok. trust me on that one. when washing, be careful not to slosh water into/onto the fluid reservoir - contaminates the fluid. |
Re: [90 Accord] Master or Wheel cylinders going?
jim beam <nospam@example.net> wrote in
news:1107833868.9340fb28841cfb956787624df0ce1518@t eranews: > > to bleed, a fudge is to replace the cylinder & connect the brake lines, > but not tighten fully. you can then bleed in situ only tightening the > lines after they stop bubbling without having to bleed the whole system, If I understand you correctly, you're letting the air bubble out from the threads on the flares at the master cylinder, and once you get pure fluid squirting out, you tighten the flares then bleed at the wheels? -- TeGGeR® The Unofficial Honda/Acura FAQ www.tegger.com/hondafaq/ |
Re: [90 Accord] Master or Wheel cylinders going?
TeGGer® wrote:
> jim beam <nospam@example.net> wrote in > news:1107833868.9340fb28841cfb956787624df0ce1518@t eranews: > > > >>to bleed, a fudge is to replace the cylinder & connect the brake lines, >>but not tighten fully. you can then bleed in situ only tightening the >>lines after they stop bubbling without having to bleed the whole system, > > > > If I understand you correctly, you're letting the air bubble out from the > threads on the flares at the master cylinder, and once you get pure fluid > squirting out, you tighten the flares then bleed at the wheels? yes. quick & dirty, but it works. |
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