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Forums › The Car › Solved 206 Problems › suddenly spongy brake pedal (+which pugs can be brake bled)


 
 

suddenly spongy brake pedal (+which pugs can be brake bled)
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Steve206
PostPosted: Tue Jun 11, 2013 1:23 pm Up
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LeeThr wrote:
Big_Rich180 wrote:
LeeThr wrote:
macca1411 wrote:
Unless you have Peugeot Planet, you can't bleed the brakes.

Only applies to the GTi 180.

Why, I thought it was to do with the ABS?

Only applies to the ABS system with ESP Wink

Which the only 206 to have was the 180.

Wrong. My 54 plate GTi has it.

Work in Progress
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MrBSI
PostPosted: Tue Jun 11, 2013 1:29 pm Up
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LeeThr wrote:
Big_Rich180 wrote:
LeeThr wrote:
macca1411 wrote:
Unless you have Peugeot Planet, you can't bleed the brakes.

Only applies to the GTi 180.

Why, I thought it was to do with the ABS?

Only applies to the ABS system with ESP Wink

Which the only 206 to have was the 180.

Later GTI have it as standard, GTI HDI has it as standard.

I've seen it fitted to an ET3 powered 206 as the owner ticked the option box when they ordered the car new.

Toyota C-HR GR Sport 2.0 Hybrid with JBL & Alcantara packs.
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LeeThr
PostPosted: Tue Jun 11, 2013 1:33 pm Up
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MrBSI wrote:
LeeThr wrote:
Big_Rich180 wrote:
LeeThr wrote:
macca1411 wrote:
Unless you have Peugeot Planet, you can't bleed the brakes.

Only applies to the GTi 180.

Why, I thought it was to do with the ABS?

Only applies to the ABS system with ESP Wink

Which the only 206 to have was the 180.

Later GTI have it as standard, GTI HDI has it as standard.

I've seen it fitted to an ET3 powered 206 as the owner ticked the option box when they ordered the car new.

All those 90 horses must have been hard to tame Laughing

 


gogs_macaulay wrote:
LeeThr wrote:
One Hundred million bazillion gatrillion pink rupee's
Shut it u stupid little f**k, what's the point in posting in all my treads being such a c***? Least I can afford a gti180, and to get the cam belt done!

So apparently everyone knows my financial situation? If I wanted a 180 I would have bought a 180 simples Smile

The garage
2003 - 206 GTi 138 - Moonstone Blue
2003 - 406 Coupé 2.2 HDi SE - Hyperion Blue
2000 - 206 2L HDi D-Turbo ECO - Cherry Red
1999 - 306 GTi-6 - Blue (haven't worked out if it's Nile or China yet)
1987 - 205 GTi 1.9 - Graphite Gray

I must be mad.....
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eddie206
PostPosted: Wed Jun 12, 2013 4:55 pm Up
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I am well aware that brake fluid is a degrading liquid,so over time if its exposed to air it will lose its non compressiive qualities and will need replacing..

But is this fact a possible cause of this guys problems because if there's no leaks to be found maybe a full brake fluid change is needed here?

Does anyone have any experience of this brake fluids main properties loss??i suppose leaving the cap off for long enough can cause this?

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Sim
PostPosted: Fri Jun 14, 2013 7:38 am Up
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I would agree on brake fluid having air, or being old altogether, so bleeding brakes or replacing the whole fluid is [somewhere down] on my TODO list.

But I'm questioning why the brake pedal went all spongy so sudden -- from one moment to the other.

Other forum (Toyota 4x4s) said:
Quote::
Check the shoes on the rear, you get pedal pressure from the rear.

My local garage suspects the whole brake pedal fitting frame (the lever) might be snapped/bending down
If not that, then I told them to look into rear shoes, too

Master cylinder seal loose is not likely, because the car brakes just as good as before

We keep fighting Smile

2.0 HDi, year 2000 (E's restin')
Red GTi 180, year 2004 (VorTechS' sEXy Beast (being) remasteRed)
Blue GTi 180, year 2004 (in hibernation after endless driving fun in 2019, queued for "cambelt in tight spaces")
Missus' 1.6 16v CC, year 2007 (L-plates to P-plates to NO-plates, but now she wants powwer:))
£50 1.4 HDi, year 2002 (seatless transporter, SORNed, rust needs patching)
EV
Jag S(crapped)- & X-Type
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Sim
PostPosted: Fri Jun 14, 2013 7:54 am Up
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Wrote some rubbish myself (together with local garage suggestions):
sledge wrote:
My local garage suspects the whole brake pedal fitting frame (the lever) might be snapped/bending down
Wrong, because pedal would feel spongy even with engine off. Or instead, when you pump the pedal a bit, it now becomes hard for couple of next presses
sledge wrote:
Master cylinder seal loose is not likely, because the car brakes just as good as before
Wrong, because a seal-leaking M/C would still generate same amount of brake pressure efficiency, it's just that the brake pedal would travel to the ground as you stomp on brakes -- exactly my behaviour! (as opposed to staying firm hard, or travelling minimally - just checked on 307 -- it -does- travel, but you barely realise, unless firmly braking for 5 or more seconds)

On a Mercedes though, travel to the ground is normal, the travel should be on every car I think (the brake fluid -is- circulating, when constant hard pressure is applied to the pedal, just at different rates for different cars; and should not feel beyond zone of comfort. Mercedes normal travel speed apparently is on the border of comfort Smile )

2.0 HDi, year 2000 (E's restin')
Red GTi 180, year 2004 (VorTechS' sEXy Beast (being) remasteRed)
Blue GTi 180, year 2004 (in hibernation after endless driving fun in 2019, queued for "cambelt in tight spaces")
Missus' 1.6 16v CC, year 2007 (L-plates to P-plates to NO-plates, but now she wants powwer:))
£50 1.4 HDi, year 2002 (seatless transporter, SORNed, rust needs patching)
EV
Jag S(crapped)- & X-Type
GTC VXR (sold)
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macca1411
PostPosted: Fri Jun 14, 2013 8:05 am Up
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eddie206 wrote:
I am well aware that brake fluid is a degrading liquid,so over time if its exposed to air it will lose its non compressiive qualities and will need replacing..

But is this fact a possible cause of this guys problems because if there's no leaks to be found maybe a full brake fluid change is needed here?

Does anyone have any experience of this brake fluids main properties loss??i suppose leaving the cap off for long enough can cause this?

www.aa-academy.com/Tra...Fluids.asp

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Sim
PostPosted: Fri Jun 14, 2013 8:11 am Up
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macca1411 wrote:
http://www.aa-academy.com/Training/Learning%20Zone/Brake%20Fluids.asp
So can this statement be true: "when a water content in brake fluid gets higher than a certain amount, the pedal firmness is lost from one mile to another, i.e. exponentially and not gradually" ?

2.0 HDi, year 2000 (E's restin')
Red GTi 180, year 2004 (VorTechS' sEXy Beast (being) remasteRed)
Blue GTi 180, year 2004 (in hibernation after endless driving fun in 2019, queued for "cambelt in tight spaces")
Missus' 1.6 16v CC, year 2007 (L-plates to P-plates to NO-plates, but now she wants powwer:))
£50 1.4 HDi, year 2002 (seatless transporter, SORNed, rust needs patching)
EV
Jag S(crapped)- & X-Type
GTC VXR (sold)
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macca1411
PostPosted: Fri Jun 14, 2013 8:21 am Up
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sledge wrote:
macca1411 wrote:
http://www.aa-academy.com/Training/Learning%20Zone/Brake%20Fluids.asp
So can this statement be true: "when a water content in brake fluid gets higher than a certain amount, the pedal firmness is lost from one mile to another, i.e. exponentially and not gradually" ?

On this quote yes
Quote::
This ‘soaked up’ business is important. The brake fluid draws in the moisture and is absorbed into the fluid. As the fluid absorbs the moisture it thickens and its ability to withstand heat and corrosion is reduced. The result is a significant drop in the temperature at which the fluid boils so after a period of heavy braking, the fluid could boil in the calipers. Hydraulics work on the principle that you cannot compress a liquid so the pressure created is used to force the pads against the discs or the shoes against the drums. However, if the water in the fluid boils you can compress a vapour (the steam produced) and this will greatly increase the distance the pedal will have to travel to apply the brakes.
If your brakes are cold like at the end of a motorway, then there will be very little water vapour, but then you go onto an A road with lights and roundabouts and your brakes are used more which then increases the temp and turns the water into vapour which compresses.

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Sim
PostPosted: Fri Jun 14, 2013 8:26 am Up
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macca1411 wrote:
If your brakes are cold like at the end of a motorway, then there will be very little water vapour, but then you go onto an A road with lights and roundabouts and your brakes are used more which then increases the temp and turns the water into vapour which compresses.
Thanks macca, my question is about my case: brake pedal behaviour changes over long-term: I had been driving this car with firm brake pedal for 18 months, and now it became soft, regardless the road.
So if that holds for brake fluid to deteriorate over time, but expose noticeable symptoms in a day, then car just needs bleeding or replace the whole brake fluid (in turn dismissing M/C, rear shoe, etc suspects)

2.0 HDi, year 2000 (E's restin')
Red GTi 180, year 2004 (VorTechS' sEXy Beast (being) remasteRed)
Blue GTi 180, year 2004 (in hibernation after endless driving fun in 2019, queued for "cambelt in tight spaces")
Missus' 1.6 16v CC, year 2007 (L-plates to P-plates to NO-plates, but now she wants powwer:))
£50 1.4 HDi, year 2002 (seatless transporter, SORNed, rust needs patching)
EV
Jag S(crapped)- & X-Type
GTC VXR (sold)
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macca1411
PostPosted: Fri Jun 14, 2013 8:40 am Up
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I'd start with a fluid change and work from there. It's worth checking over all the brake components at the same time. Drums off, adjust the shoes so you can just pass the drums over them. Make sure the auto adjusters are working. Check along all the pipes and connections for signs of a leak, maybe use tracing spray. Make sure the compensator valve (if fitted) is working and not seized. Quite a few things to look at, but with brakes, might as well do everything properly.
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Sim
PostPosted: Thu Jun 20, 2013 8:29 am Up
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Many thanks macca! a great concise tutorial

I tried removing drums myself, but couldn't undo the rear hub nut. I even snapped the nut's edge when I tried to bend it out from the cut-out hole in the axle (that's why they need to be replaced upon undoing anyhow according to Haynes).

So I leave it for the garage to inspect this weekend. I also bought them these (ok quality? lol those were my last words Smile ): www.ebay.co.uk/itm/330831879159

For the spongy brake pedal senior mechanic suspects brake servo malfunctioning (working too well!?) But I insisted they remove drums and do thorough inspection (they didn't have time to remove them last week).

Could this be servo?..

2.0 HDi, year 2000 (E's restin')
Red GTi 180, year 2004 (VorTechS' sEXy Beast (being) remasteRed)
Blue GTi 180, year 2004 (in hibernation after endless driving fun in 2019, queued for "cambelt in tight spaces")
Missus' 1.6 16v CC, year 2007 (L-plates to P-plates to NO-plates, but now she wants powwer:))
£50 1.4 HDi, year 2002 (seatless transporter, SORNed, rust needs patching)
EV
Jag S(crapped)- & X-Type
GTC VXR (sold)
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kandlbarrett
PostPosted: Sat Jun 22, 2013 6:49 am Up
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A leaking master cylinder seal, in theory, shouldn't pump up as your does. However, I have seen them do that and it is what I suspect as your current root problem.

Brake fluid should be changed every couple of years but frequency depends on the type of fluid in the system. It is unusual for water in your fluid to give a sudden change in brake degradation (you describe it happening overnight) - it is usually a gradual loss over many months. However, if the fluid hasn't been changed for a few years then do that anyway.

The rear stub axle nut is (should be) torqued to 200NM or 148ft.lb which is tight but not too bad. To release the area that the nut is staked I use an old screwdriver and tap it between the staked portion of the nut and the stub. I must admit I have a very long bar that means ALL nuts are easy to release. You must fit new nuts when reassembling everything but they are cheap enough from either Peugeot or must motor factors and tighten the nut with a torque wrench not guess work.

Summary: if you are certain you don't have a leak then my bet is master cylinder seal and change the fluid if it is old.

Morris 1000, Austin 1100, Escort Mk2, Fiat Mirafiori, Alfa 33, Alfa GT Junior, Alfasud, Alfetta GTV (2x), Alfa 164 3.0 V6, Alfa 164 2.0, Alfa 75 V6, Alfa 156 2.4 (diesel remapped 200bhp), Alfa 147 GTA (3.6 295bhp), Alfa 159 (diesel remapped 245bhp 300ft.lbs @ 2500rpm)
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Sim
PostPosted: Thu Jul 18, 2013 5:02 am Up
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Apparently, replaced brake fluid fixed all nuisances. So if it goes spongy from one corner to another - replacing fluid is a good thing to do (especially when it's >1.5 years old)

Cheers all!

2.0 HDi, year 2000 (E's restin')
Red GTi 180, year 2004 (VorTechS' sEXy Beast (being) remasteRed)
Blue GTi 180, year 2004 (in hibernation after endless driving fun in 2019, queued for "cambelt in tight spaces")
Missus' 1.6 16v CC, year 2007 (L-plates to P-plates to NO-plates, but now she wants powwer:))
£50 1.4 HDi, year 2002 (seatless transporter, SORNed, rust needs patching)
EV
Jag S(crapped)- & X-Type
GTC VXR (sold)
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DREWDEN
PostPosted: Thu Jul 18, 2013 5:30 am Up
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Just out of curiousity, how did you bleed the brakes.
Garage peugeot planet.
Or manually the old fashioned way.

206 2ltr Hdi glx 53 plate
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