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Car Forum / Chevrolet / Chevrolet Corvette / June 2007

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brakes on the 72

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JCORVETTE 72&75 - 07 Jun 2007 12:56 GMT
after i rebuilt all the calipers anf bled the system twice the brakes
seemsd to work fine then gradually the brake pedal got softer and
softer. the pedal going almost to the floor. the car stops fine except
excseesive pedal travel
the brakes grab real quick.
there is absolutely no fluid loss.
brake pads are all fine.
the booster isnt all that old.
engine vacuum is correct. not sure if booster would affect engine vacuum
or not
thx for any help
jerome

http://community.webtv.net/jcorvette/MYMOSAICS
WayneC - 07 Jun 2007 14:08 GMT
> after i rebuilt all the calipers anf bled the system twice the brakes
> seemsd to work fine then gradually the brake pedal got softer and
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
>
> http://community.webtv.net/jcorvette/MYMOSAICS

Sounds like there's still some air in the system; bleed 'em again. Then the
only thing I can suggest is that you check run-out between the calipers
and the
rotors (looking for a warped rotor), as excessive run-out has a tendency to
pump air into the system.
Tom in Missouri - 07 Jun 2007 16:30 GMT
Two things can be wrong here.  First is that you still have air in the
system. Second, you could be getting a master cylinder failure.

Remember there are 6 bleeders, not 4, that must be bled to get solid pedal.
The four rear bleeders are at the TOP of the calipers when mounted, not on
each end.  Sometimes people put a bleeder screw in the outside lower hole.
Do not bleed the lower hole.  It should be plugged.  The easiest method I
have found is gravity bleeding, as it works and is usually foolproof.  It is
slow, often taking 15 minutes per caliper or more. Have patience and get
good results.

Put the car on jackstands.

Remove all four tires.

Fill the master cylinder.   If you are using DOT 5 silicone fluid, pour
slowly and carefully to prevent air bubbles.  Remember to check the MC
throughout the bleeding process to be sure the fluid is full. If the MC goes
dry, you will have a long time to bleed that air out.

Crack the bleeders on the MC to be sure no air bubbles are trapped there. If
you bench bled, there should not be.  If the MC has not gone dry, there
should not be.

Open a bleeder on the left rear caliper. Wait until fluid comes out. Watch
for air bubbles.  After you see the last of the bubbles, keep bleeding a
short time to be sure there are no more that were just further upstream.

Repeat with the other bleeder on the same caliper.

Bleed the left front caliper. Keep bleeding for a short time after the last
bubbles are seen.

Bleed the right front caliper.

Move to the right rear caliper and do this on each bleeder.

Check your pedal. If it still goes soft, repeat the process.  However. this
time, leave each bleeder open about 15 minutes before checking for air.
Remember to keep the MC full during this time.  This will flush fluid from
the lines out the calipers in case air is trapped in the lines.

If you still have a problem, repeat the long bleed one more time. It is
easier to do it once again than replacing the master cylinder.  If you still
have a failure, then you need to rebuild or replace the master cylinder.

If you are concerned with originality, then you need to rebuild your MC. It
is possible that you won't be able to due to rust pitting in the bore, and
will need to send it to someone to bore, resleeve, and rebuilt.  Some swear
by the stainless steel sleeves like the calipers, but others believe that
brass sleeves work better in the MC.

Good luck.

> after i rebuilt all the calipers anf bled the system twice the brakes
> seemsd to work fine then gradually the brake pedal got softer and
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
>
> http://community.webtv.net/jcorvette/MYMOSAICS
Frank - 11 Jun 2007 00:17 GMT
Would this procedure work on a '77?
TIA,
Frank Bradley.........
Veritas Vos Liberabit
 Two things can be wrong here.  First is that you still have air in the
 system. Second, you could be getting a master cylinder failure.

 Remember there are 6 bleeders, not 4, that must be bled to get solid pedal.
 The four rear bleeders are at the TOP of the calipers when mounted, not on
 each end.  Sometimes people put a bleeder screw in the outside lower hole.
 Do not bleed the lower hole.  It should be plugged.  The easiest method I
 have found is gravity bleeding, as it works and is usually foolproof.  It is
 slow, often taking 15 minutes per caliper or more. Have patience and get
 good results.

 Put the car on jackstands.

 Remove all four tires.

 Fill the master cylinder.   If you are using DOT 5 silicone fluid, pour
 slowly and carefully to prevent air bubbles.  Remember to check the MC
 throughout the bleeding process to be sure the fluid is full. If the MC goes
 dry, you will have a long time to bleed that air out.

 Crack the bleeders on the MC to be sure no air bubbles are trapped there. If
 you bench bled, there should not be.  If the MC has not gone dry, there
 should not be.

 Open a bleeder on the left rear caliper. Wait until fluid comes out. Watch
 for air bubbles.  After you see the last of the bubbles, keep bleeding a
 short time to be sure there are no more that were just further upstream.

 Repeat with the other bleeder on the same caliper.

 Bleed the left front caliper. Keep bleeding for a short time after the last
 bubbles are seen.

 Bleed the right front caliper.

 Move to the right rear caliper and do this on each bleeder.

 Check your pedal. If it still goes soft, repeat the process.  However. this
 time, leave each bleeder open about 15 minutes before checking for air.
 Remember to keep the MC full during this time.  This will flush fluid from
 the lines out the calipers in case air is trapped in the lines.

 If you still have a problem, repeat the long bleed one more time. It is
 easier to do it once again than replacing the master cylinder.  If you still
 have a failure, then you need to rebuild or replace the master cylinder.

 If you are concerned with originality, then you need to rebuild your MC. It
 is possible that you won't be able to due to rust pitting in the bore, and
 will need to send it to someone to bore, resleeve, and rebuilt.  Some swear
 by the stainless steel sleeves like the calipers, but others believe that
 brass sleeves work better in the MC.

 Good luck.

 "JCORVETTE 72&75" <jcorvette@webtv.net> wrote in message
 news:2597-4667F252-1049@storefull-3255.bay.webtv.net...
 > after i rebuilt all the calipers anf bled the system twice the brakes
 > seemsd to work fine then gradually the brake pedal got softer and
 > softer. the pedal going almost to the floor. the car stops fine except
 > excseesive pedal travel
 > the brakes grab real quick.
 > there is absolutely no fluid loss.
 > brake pads are all fine.
 > the booster isnt all that old.
 > engine vacuum is correct. not sure if booster would affect engine vacuum
 > or not
 > thx for any help
 > jerome
 >
 >
 > http://community.webtv.net/jcorvette/MYMOSAICS
 >
Tom in Missouri - 11 Jun 2007 02:28 GMT
It is the same 1965 to 1982.

Would this procedure work on a '77?
TIA,
Frank Bradley.........
Veritas Vos Liberabit
Two things can be wrong here.  First is that you still have air in the
system. Second, you could be getting a master cylinder failure.

Remember there are 6 bleeders, not 4, that must be bled to get solid pedal.
The four rear bleeders are at the TOP of the calipers when mounted, not on
each end.  Sometimes people put a bleeder screw in the outside lower hole.
Do not bleed the lower hole.  It should be plugged.  The easiest method I
have found is gravity bleeding, as it works and is usually foolproof.  It is
slow, often taking 15 minutes per caliper or more. Have patience and get
good results.

Put the car on jackstands.

Remove all four tires.

Fill the master cylinder.   If you are using DOT 5 silicone fluid, pour
slowly and carefully to prevent air bubbles.  Remember to check the MC
throughout the bleeding process to be sure the fluid is full. If the MC goes
dry, you will have a long time to bleed that air out.

Crack the bleeders on the MC to be sure no air bubbles are trapped there. If
you bench bled, there should not be.  If the MC has not gone dry, there
should not be.

Open a bleeder on the left rear caliper. Wait until fluid comes out. Watch
for air bubbles.  After you see the last of the bubbles, keep bleeding a
short time to be sure there are no more that were just further upstream.

Repeat with the other bleeder on the same caliper.

Bleed the left front caliper. Keep bleeding for a short time after the last
bubbles are seen.

Bleed the right front caliper.

Move to the right rear caliper and do this on each bleeder.

Check your pedal. If it still goes soft, repeat the process.  However. this
time, leave each bleeder open about 15 minutes before checking for air.
Remember to keep the MC full during this time.  This will flush fluid from
the lines out the calipers in case air is trapped in the lines.

If you still have a problem, repeat the long bleed one more time. It is
easier to do it once again than replacing the master cylinder.  If you still
have a failure, then you need to rebuild or replace the master cylinder.

If you are concerned with originality, then you need to rebuild your MC. It
is possible that you won't be able to due to rust pitting in the bore, and
will need to send it to someone to bore, resleeve, and rebuilt.  Some swear
by the stainless steel sleeves like the calipers, but others believe that
brass sleeves work better in the MC.

Good luck.

> after i rebuilt all the calipers anf bled the system twice the brakes
> seemsd to work fine then gradually the brake pedal got softer and
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
>
> http://community.webtv.net/jcorvette/MYMOSAICS
Frank - 11 Jun 2007 16:08 GMT
Tnx,
Frank Bradley.........
Veritas Vos Liberabit
 It is the same 1965 to 1982.

 "Frank" <frank.b.bradley@verizon.net> wrote in message
 news:ND%ai.545$or4.153@trnddc06...
 Would this procedure work on a '77?
 TIA,
 Frank Bradley.........
 Veritas Vos Liberabit
 "Tom in Missouri" <toomuch@spam.com> wrote in message
 news:EwV9i.1813$tb6.1545@newsread3.news.pas.earthlink.net...
 Two things can be wrong here.  First is that you still have air in the
 system. Second, you could be getting a master cylinder failure.

 Remember there are 6 bleeders, not 4, that must be bled to get solid pedal.
 The four rear bleeders are at the TOP of the calipers when mounted, not on
 each end.  Sometimes people put a bleeder screw in the outside lower hole.
 Do not bleed the lower hole.  It should be plugged.  The easiest method I
 have found is gravity bleeding, as it works and is usually foolproof.  It is
 slow, often taking 15 minutes per caliper or more. Have patience and get
 good results.

 Put the car on jackstands.

 Remove all four tires.

 Fill the master cylinder.   If you are using DOT 5 silicone fluid, pour
 slowly and carefully to prevent air bubbles.  Remember to check the MC
 throughout the bleeding process to be sure the fluid is full. If the MC goes
 dry, you will have a long time to bleed that air out.

 Crack the bleeders on the MC to be sure no air bubbles are trapped there. If
 you bench bled, there should not be.  If the MC has not gone dry, there
 should not be.

 Open a bleeder on the left rear caliper. Wait until fluid comes out. Watch
 for air bubbles.  After you see the last of the bubbles, keep bleeding a
 short time to be sure there are no more that were just further upstream.

 Repeat with the other bleeder on the same caliper.

 Bleed the left front caliper. Keep bleeding for a short time after the last
 bubbles are seen.

 Bleed the right front caliper.

 Move to the right rear caliper and do this on each bleeder.

 Check your pedal. If it still goes soft, repeat the process.  However. this
 time, leave each bleeder open about 15 minutes before checking for air.
 Remember to keep the MC full during this time.  This will flush fluid from
 the lines out the calipers in case air is trapped in the lines.

 If you still have a problem, repeat the long bleed one more time. It is
 easier to do it once again than replacing the master cylinder.  If you still
 have a failure, then you need to rebuild or replace the master cylinder.

 If you are concerned with originality, then you need to rebuild your MC. It
 is possible that you won't be able to due to rust pitting in the bore, and
 will need to send it to someone to bore, resleeve, and rebuilt.  Some swear
 by the stainless steel sleeves like the calipers, but others believe that
 brass sleeves work better in the MC.

 Good luck.

 "JCORVETTE 72&75" <jcorvette@webtv.net> wrote in message
 news:2597-4667F252-1049@storefull-3255.bay.webtv.net...
 > after i rebuilt all the calipers anf bled the system twice the brakes
 > seemsd to work fine then gradually the brake pedal got softer and
 > softer. the pedal going almost to the floor. the car stops fine except
 > excseesive pedal travel
 > the brakes grab real quick.
 > there is absolutely no fluid loss.
 > brake pads are all fine.
 > the booster isnt all that old.
 > engine vacuum is correct. not sure if booster would affect engine vacuum
 > or not
 > thx for any help
 > jerome
 >
 >
 > http://community.webtv.net/jcorvette/MYMOSAICS
 >
'Key - 07 Jun 2007 17:15 GMT
> after i rebuilt all the calipers anf bled the system twice
> the brakes
[quoted text clipped - 14 lines]
>
> http://community.webtv.net/jcorvette/MYMOSAICS

same thing happened with a 75 vette that I had.
it took about 4 times bleeding the system to correct the
problem.

Signature

"Key"
=====

JCORVETTE 72&75 - 08 Jun 2007 14:42 GMT
thx guys .i will work on bleeding and checking runout.
the MC seems to be fine. we did bench bleed it
thx again

http://community.webtv.net/jcorvette/MYMOSAICS
JCORVETTE 72&75 - 14 Jun 2007 13:48 GMT
i started on frt wheels of course...right rotor was warped. when i
pulled off the right tire the back
of tire and wheel were wet from silicone brake fluid
i pulled the caliper off and seen where i mess up the piston seals when
i repleced them. that can be tricky at times
i had the rotors turned and should get it all back to gether today.
it still rather hot weather for a non-ac car tho
but i will manage.
thx for help
jerome

http://community.webtv.net/jcorvette/MYMOSAICS
WayneC - 16 Jun 2007 13:55 GMT
> i started on frt wheels of course...right rotor was warped. when i
> pulled off the right tire the back
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
>
> http://community.webtv.net/jcorvette/MYMOSAICS

Glad to hear you identified the problem.
 
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