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Suppliers include people "breaking for spares" on a regular basis, when purchasing spares members should ask a supplier what they contribute to the running of the forum particularly if contacted by a Private Message
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Jimny Big rear brake upgrade
- Roger Fairclough
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04 Jan 2023 22:53 #246665
by Roger Fairclough
Replied by Roger Fairclough on topic Jimny Big rear brake upgrade
I think there may be a problem with the way the brakes are being bled. Beg, borrow or steal 3 brake hose clamps. If that is a no go use adjustable clamps ( mole grips ) but protect the hose from damage. Once fitted, push on the brake pedal, there should be little movement and the pedal should be solid. If it is, remove each front clamp in turn and retry the pedal each time. There should be a little more movement each time but the pedal should feel firm. If your findings are as above the problem is in the rear brakes. If when you clamp of all the hoses the pedal is soft and moves appreciably, then the bleeding was wrong or the master cylinder is at fault.
Note that if the fluid had water in it, the master cylinder walls can rust over time and as bleeding the brakes uses the full stroke of the master cylinder piston, the main seal on the piston can be damaged and you will require a new master cylinder. I suggest you carry out the process as detailed above and report back with your findings.
Roger
Note that if the fluid had water in it, the master cylinder walls can rust over time and as bleeding the brakes uses the full stroke of the master cylinder piston, the main seal on the piston can be damaged and you will require a new master cylinder. I suggest you carry out the process as detailed above and report back with your findings.
Roger
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05 Jan 2023 08:36 #246670
by Busta
I'd definitely recommend getting an experienced mechanic to have a look, especially if you are driving around with defective brakes...
Replied by Busta on topic Jimny Big rear brake upgrade
The movement of the caliper with each stroke of the brake pedal is small- around 1-2mm. If the caliper is at an different angle to the disc then they will always get pushed back to the point where they barely make contact. When you start braking an edge of the pad will contact first, making very little braking effort. You have to pump the pedal more times to twist the caliper around and get more pad contact, but every time you release the pedal some of that work is undone.Also on this topic,
Say its not aligned,
Surely the first pump would push the piston out?
Then it will sit there, and the second pump would brake properly.
Or does something retract the piston back in after every brake pump?
I'd definitely recommend getting an experienced mechanic to have a look, especially if you are driving around with defective brakes...
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- Zapnologica
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06 Jan 2023 13:19 #246724
by Zapnologica
2015 Suzuki Jimny
4" 100mm Lift
M18A Motor
Crawler Gears
Dual Air Lockers
Lots of mods.
Replied by Zapnologica on topic Jimny Big rear brake upgrade
So Update to all.
I believe the rear pads are seated properly, when I manually toggle the handbrake lever, I can barely move it, the pads are right against the rotor. They don't even move 0.5mm. So that is not the issue.
I went to a brake shop today, to be honest, everyone has been very hesitant to help and or assist me. Went to about 3 places today and eventually, the one guy put the car on the brake dyno, he said it scored perfectly If I didn't say it was modified he would pass it, except for the fact that we have to double pedal each time. (which he says is a symptom of not enough fluid going to the brakes).
So after a very long rabbit hole of youtube and reading, I have decided that it is the stock combination valve that is limiting fluid to the rear.
This video leads me to this idea. It seems this combination valve is made for rear drum brake vehicles. I'm not sure if anyone on this forum has changed this out or bypassed it. But I see some people install rear brake proportion valves. Im not sure where and if they then replace the stock Jimny one.
But this lead me to an experiment, I went and bought some hose, and I wired the master cylinder directly into the abs module, essentially bypassing the stock proportion valve. When I took it for a drive, not much seemed to change, however the brakes felt a lot sharper and more aggressive when braking hard, but it still took 2 or 3 pedals to build up some brake pressure.
So this now has me asking two questions:
1: is the Jimmy brake system got a front-rear split? so each master cylinder piston controls a different circuit. ( a lot of cars with brake lines to each wheel, will do this diagonally)
The way I have it wired now in my mind should be sending fluid 50:50 to the front and rear
Question 2:
The Jimny's front rear callipers are roughly 51mm big stock. and the master cylinder seems to fill them up. Why would it not fill up my rear 38mm callipers. I have essentially wired one master cylinder piston to the front system and one to the rear. Unless the abs unit is also mixing and matching lines ( I doubt it).
I believe the rear pads are seated properly, when I manually toggle the handbrake lever, I can barely move it, the pads are right against the rotor. They don't even move 0.5mm. So that is not the issue.
I went to a brake shop today, to be honest, everyone has been very hesitant to help and or assist me. Went to about 3 places today and eventually, the one guy put the car on the brake dyno, he said it scored perfectly If I didn't say it was modified he would pass it, except for the fact that we have to double pedal each time. (which he says is a symptom of not enough fluid going to the brakes).
So after a very long rabbit hole of youtube and reading, I have decided that it is the stock combination valve that is limiting fluid to the rear.
This video leads me to this idea. It seems this combination valve is made for rear drum brake vehicles. I'm not sure if anyone on this forum has changed this out or bypassed it. But I see some people install rear brake proportion valves. Im not sure where and if they then replace the stock Jimny one.
But this lead me to an experiment, I went and bought some hose, and I wired the master cylinder directly into the abs module, essentially bypassing the stock proportion valve. When I took it for a drive, not much seemed to change, however the brakes felt a lot sharper and more aggressive when braking hard, but it still took 2 or 3 pedals to build up some brake pressure.
So this now has me asking two questions:
1: is the Jimmy brake system got a front-rear split? so each master cylinder piston controls a different circuit. ( a lot of cars with brake lines to each wheel, will do this diagonally)
The way I have it wired now in my mind should be sending fluid 50:50 to the front and rear
Question 2:
The Jimny's front rear callipers are roughly 51mm big stock. and the master cylinder seems to fill them up. Why would it not fill up my rear 38mm callipers. I have essentially wired one master cylinder piston to the front system and one to the rear. Unless the abs unit is also mixing and matching lines ( I doubt it).
2015 Suzuki Jimny
4" 100mm Lift
M18A Motor
Crawler Gears
Dual Air Lockers
Lots of mods.
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- Roger Fairclough
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06 Jan 2023 13:38 #246726
by Roger Fairclough
Replied by Roger Fairclough on topic Jimny Big rear brake upgrade
The basic start to your dilemma is the master cylinder. You must carry out the test that I have mentioned in my previous memo so that we can be assured that the heart of the system is working correctly.
Roger
Roger
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06 Jan 2023 14:00 #246727
by DrRobin
2020 blue SZ5 (one of the last to be registered in the UK)
Ex 2011 Blue Jimny SZ4
Northumberland Jimny Blog
Replied by DrRobin on topic Jimny Big rear brake upgrade
The 'double press' is concerning me. See this article and diagram how hydraulic brakes work
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_brake
Essentially it is a sealed system, so when you press the brake pedal the master cylinder pushes fluid to the calipers and pushes the pads on to the discs. When you release the pedal the master cylinder sucks the fluid back from the calipers. If there is too little or too much fluid, this is topped up or removed to the reservoir.
The fact that you can double press the pedal and get more brake pressure sounds like either you have air in the system or there is a leak, possibly in the master cylinder. If there is no air or leak then the pads wouldn't move any further on to the disc as when you release the pedal they move back by the same amount, not hold where they are and move in again.
When you 'double press' is it okay with a single press for a few seconds afterwards or does it always need a double press?
Either way, I would be surprised if it would pass a MOT in the UK.
Robin
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydraulic_brake
Essentially it is a sealed system, so when you press the brake pedal the master cylinder pushes fluid to the calipers and pushes the pads on to the discs. When you release the pedal the master cylinder sucks the fluid back from the calipers. If there is too little or too much fluid, this is topped up or removed to the reservoir.
The fact that you can double press the pedal and get more brake pressure sounds like either you have air in the system or there is a leak, possibly in the master cylinder. If there is no air or leak then the pads wouldn't move any further on to the disc as when you release the pedal they move back by the same amount, not hold where they are and move in again.
When you 'double press' is it okay with a single press for a few seconds afterwards or does it always need a double press?
Either way, I would be surprised if it would pass a MOT in the UK.
Robin
2020 blue SZ5 (one of the last to be registered in the UK)
Ex 2011 Blue Jimny SZ4
Northumberland Jimny Blog
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