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Brake pedal very soft


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I just put on new pads on all four corners and bled the lines. The peddle was mushy before, so thought changing the pads and bleeding would fix the problem. The peddle in still very soft. It almost goes to the floor when pressed firmly. The car stops, but not like I would think it should. Brakes will not lock up. I have lots of ebrake. Hillstopper works great.

 

I am thinking the M.C. it bad. Anything else it might be. Thanks

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You have e-brake because its a cable brake

 

Rebleed your brakes, and make sure the brake booster is working properly

 

which order did you bleed the brakeS?

 

I believe (correct me if I'm wrong) it goes front pass, back driver front driver, back pass.

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The cross pattern is optimal, but sometimes it's easier to lift one end of the car at a time. As long as you bleed the fronts first, there shouldn't be any problems.

 

Did the fluid come from a fresh, sealed container? Might try another fluid, Castrol DOT4 "Response" is the canine's testicles.

 

If the problem persists, your MC piston seals are probably leaking.

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Torxx I had the same problem on my GL-10 and the problem was a bad front caliper. I replaced them both and now the pedal is hig and tight. It is a job to replace them both, but there is no real way to tell which one is bad. Good Luck

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I had the same symptons on several of my subies and almost all - it was the master cylinder.

 

If bleeding doen't work, get a remanufactured master cylinder, prolly ~$25-$40.

 

It fixed that problem in mine and an easy install too, just be sure you bleed again when done.

 

The fancy vacuum bleeders are like $40 at Harbor Freight if you find yourself bleeding all the time by yourself.

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Please let me begin by saying, I do not want to get into a urinating contest.

I have always been taught to

a) start at the wheel furthest from the master cyl. (being the pass rear) and work toward the MC.

B) on some calipers raising the end of the vehicle can put the bleed nipple in a position to allow air pockets to excape more readily.

c) never push the brake pedal down to a point where the pistons will travel over accumulated debris in the MC.

d) if possible use a vacuum or pressure system rather than depressing the brake pedal (see "c" above),

if using a vacuum system, remove bleed nipple and cover the treads with a thick grease.

This will prevent air from being drawn in.

e) use a clear hose on the bleed nipple into a clear jar, thus making it possible to observe air leaving the system.

 

As I have had very little luck bleeding Subaru systems

the "old conventional way".

I have a spare MC cap with an air fitting drilled and tapped into it.

By appling a regulated air pressure of approx. 10 psi, bleeding is as simple as putting the clear hose on the nipple and loosening it approx 1 turn. Keep an eye on the fluid in the MC.

BUT I perfer to use the pictured vacuum pump setup

Hope this help.

And change your brake fluid, it is hrdoscopic

ezbleed.jpg

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I have never heard of bleeding them in an X pattern.

 

Front pass, back driver, front driver, back pass."

 

I have always bleed from furthest away to closed to M.C. I will try the X pattern. I do bleed by myself. I fill a jar with fluid, run a vac line from the bleeder valve into the jar, then I pump the peddle till I see clear fluid come out the hose. I also check the M.C. while doing this process to make sure it is full of fluid.

 

The engine stayed at the same idle when I pressed the peddle, so I am thinking the booster is OK (no vac leaks). The callapers, ???????? They cleaned up nice, but I did take them apart.

 

Thanks for responing

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I will check into one of them vac system. My buddy down the street might have one. I have bled many brake systems by using the fliud in a jar way. Never used a vac system before. I am still pointing my finger at the M.C. I will spend some more time on it today.

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Subarus are supposed to be bled in the X pattern because of the braking system. Subaru brakes are plumbed together to that if you bust a front passenger brake, the back drivers goes out with it so you still have front drivers side and passenger back brakes.

 

Its Subaru's way of a safety system on the brakes.

I buddy of mine worked at a subaru shop for a few years and thats how he told me to do it.

 

And as far as bad calipers go, inspect all the rubber seals on it.

Of any of them are cracked, they need to be replaced.

 

I think the calipers are supposed to be replaced every 25k miles anyways.

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Torxx, you are correct on the dual diagonal brake system but almost every car on the highway has them not just Subaru. They became the standard circa 1967. Please see this link if you question that

http://www.raybestos.com/OnLineTraining/cpt-006.htm

This does change the order in bleeding the system.

If you are in doubt of this statement here is a .pdf file you can digest.

http://www.champion-auto.com/PDF/29_BleedBr.pdf

From this link and may I quote

Many front wheel drive vehicles are equipped with a dual diagonal brake system and require a different bleeding

sequence .The recommended procedure for

this type of system is to bleed in diagonal pairs starting with

the right rear and left front, then the left rear, and finally, the

right front.

Here we see I was incorrect as I said -old school training. The fact still resides in the bleeding of the furtherst first in the system. Starting with the one furthest from the MC.

Hope this helps

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  • 1 year later...
  • 2 weeks later...
I have never heard of bleeding them in an X pattern.

 

Front pass, back driver, front driver, back pass."

 

I have always bleed from furthest away to closed to M.C. I will try the X pattern. I do bleed by myself. I fill a jar with fluid, run a vac line from the bleeder valve into the jar, then I pump the peddle till I see clear fluid come out the hose. I also check the M.C. while doing this process to make sure it is full of fluid.

 

This is true in standard RWD vehicles where the front brakes and rear brakes are separate, but on a Subaru and most other FWD cars, the brake circuits are diagonal, so if one fails you always have at least one front brake that works. Bleeding on a Subaru is as follows:

 

Passenger rear, driver front, driver rear, passenger front. Sometimes you have to bleed the MC first. easy if it has bleeder screws, but if it doesn't you can either bench bleed it or just loosen the lines (start with the one closest ot the front of the car) and have someone push and hold the brake pedal, then close the line, do this until no more air comes out. If the brakes won't bleed, you probably have air in the master cylinder.

 

And you think the Subaru is tough, try bleeding brakes on a 68 Polara with all wheel drums that's been sitting for basically 25 years without breaking any of the bleeder screws...

lol

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