Brakes Bleeding Problem: pedal is still soft
Posted: Fri Nov 24, 2017 10:12 am
Hi everybody,
2 years ago I installed bigger front brakes (from 256mm to 310mm). The brakes I installed were new: not only calipers, but also rotors and pads.
After installing the new calipers, I bled the entire brake circuit.
After that I immediately noticed that the brake pedal was too soft and with a longer travel.
During the last 2 years I tried many things to fix this problem, without any success.
I lost the count of how many times I bled the brakes...
This is a short list of what I did:
- replaced the brake hoses with stainless steel ones (HEL Performance);
- replaced brake fluid with DOT 4 LV (ATE SL6);
- bled the ABS unit with VCDS (but I'm not sure if I did it right
)
- replaced the master cylinder with a new one;
- replaced front calipers again with new ones.
I bled the brakes with the normal procedure (one person press the pedal and another opens the caliper's nipple) and also using a pressure bleeder.
According to ElsaWin, the pressure bleeder should be pressurized at almost 2bar (I never exceeded 1,9bar) and the correct bleeding order is:
- rear left
- front left
- front right
- rear right
The only benefit I obtained after all these tries is a very reactive pedal, but the long travel and the softness is still here.
This softness is not always the same, but changes while driving. So it seems like there's still some air trapped somwhere inside the brake circuit.
With VCDS I noticed that if I don't press the brake pedal, the brake pressure fluctuates between 0,00bar and 0,33bar: it seems like there's some air that's trying to expand, applying a very little pressure on the brakes, without touching the pedal.
I checked the same thing on the Polo of many of my friends who never unplugged calipers and the brake pressure is -1,33bar (gasoline engines) and 0,00bar (diesel engines).
Considering that diesel engines have a dedicated vacuum pump for the servo-assistance, I guess I have to take into consideration only the value of gasoline engines: -1,33bar.
It's clear that something is wrong on my car, but at this point I don't know what else I could try.
Maybe I should try again VCDS ABS Bleeding procedure, but I cannot understand how it has to be done correctly.
Any suggestion is really apreciated. I'm really desparate.
2 years ago I installed bigger front brakes (from 256mm to 310mm). The brakes I installed were new: not only calipers, but also rotors and pads.
After installing the new calipers, I bled the entire brake circuit.
After that I immediately noticed that the brake pedal was too soft and with a longer travel.
During the last 2 years I tried many things to fix this problem, without any success.
I lost the count of how many times I bled the brakes...
This is a short list of what I did:
- replaced the brake hoses with stainless steel ones (HEL Performance);
- replaced brake fluid with DOT 4 LV (ATE SL6);
- bled the ABS unit with VCDS (but I'm not sure if I did it right
- replaced the master cylinder with a new one;
- replaced front calipers again with new ones.
I bled the brakes with the normal procedure (one person press the pedal and another opens the caliper's nipple) and also using a pressure bleeder.
According to ElsaWin, the pressure bleeder should be pressurized at almost 2bar (I never exceeded 1,9bar) and the correct bleeding order is:
- rear left
- front left
- front right
- rear right
The only benefit I obtained after all these tries is a very reactive pedal, but the long travel and the softness is still here.
This softness is not always the same, but changes while driving. So it seems like there's still some air trapped somwhere inside the brake circuit.
With VCDS I noticed that if I don't press the brake pedal, the brake pressure fluctuates between 0,00bar and 0,33bar: it seems like there's some air that's trying to expand, applying a very little pressure on the brakes, without touching the pedal.
I checked the same thing on the Polo of many of my friends who never unplugged calipers and the brake pressure is -1,33bar (gasoline engines) and 0,00bar (diesel engines).
Considering that diesel engines have a dedicated vacuum pump for the servo-assistance, I guess I have to take into consideration only the value of gasoline engines: -1,33bar.
It's clear that something is wrong on my car, but at this point I don't know what else I could try.
Maybe I should try again VCDS ABS Bleeding procedure, but I cannot understand how it has to be done correctly.
Any suggestion is really apreciated. I'm really desparate.