Chard1966 Posted June 10, 2010 Report Posted June 10, 2010 The problem is on a 1996 Sharan TDI When using the brakes for long periodsie; not on off braking, the pedal travels almost to the floor (very scary) If you lift off the brakes and re-apply them they are then back to normalas sharp as a Knife There are no leaks or loss of Brake fluid.I have had a lot of experience with Galaxy's Alhambra Sharan'swe have 5 in our family. I know the mk1 pedal goes down half way when applying pressure when on tick overspoke at length with a ford technician he assured me this was correct. Does any one Know if there is a pressure release valve for the brake Pedal? Servoor has any one had this problem and had the fault diagnosed or fixed Quote
chrispb123456 Posted June 11, 2010 Report Posted June 11, 2010 Hi thereSounds very much like master cylinder Quote
chromedome Posted June 11, 2010 Report Posted June 11, 2010 Could be a seizing caliper. Given time the piston could fully retract so your brakes seem ok. With continous braking the piston may not retract quickly enough thus allowing excess pedal movement. Have you also checked that the pads are not jamming in the calipers allowing free movement of the piston before taking load. As previously mentioned, could be master cylinder, the seals have been know to "flip" if the brake fluid is pushed back into the system during brake disc replacement. Excess fluid should be let out of the bleed nipple to prevent this and to protect the ABS system. Quote
Chard1966 Posted June 12, 2010 Author Report Posted June 12, 2010 The problem is not to do with the brakes heating up ,it happens when you keep your foot on the brakes ieslowing down on hills, slowing down slowlybraking from any speed where you have to keep constant pressure on the pedal and it drops to the floor .They work fine for on off braking Quote
sasquartch Posted June 14, 2010 Report Posted June 14, 2010 The problem is not to do with the brakes heating up ,it happens when you keep your foot on the brakes ieslowing down on hills, slowing down slowlybraking from any speed where you have to keep constant pressure on the pedal and it drops to the floor .They work fine for on off braking Sounds like air in the system assuming you have no leaks. Would suggest you bleed the system after thoroughly checking for leaks at each wheel and master cylinder. That's pretty easy and cheap and may be the solution. If that doesn't help it sounds like the master cylinder. Quote
Richard gal Posted June 14, 2010 Report Posted June 14, 2010 Its the seal in the master cylinder, the fluid is getting past it... slowly. Quote
Chard1966 Posted June 20, 2010 Author Report Posted June 20, 2010 I have now changed thew Brake master cylinder (genuine part from VW Quote
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