ok, i was hoping this was only a problem i encounted with higher-mileage cars, but now my 74k mile car is doing it and i cannot figure out what the problem is caused by.
my ex's car did it and my old 91 did it. when her car started doing it, it was so bad you could see the front rotors glowing at night, the car was boosting at a steady speed and it began to overheat. i dont know if the caliper piston is sticking in the bore, the brake fluid pressure cant bleed back or the caliper slider pins are worn/seizing. but, when the car sits for an hour or more, the caliper releases its grip on the rotor and the car will roll freely again. right now, my car is only doing it "mildly". the car feels sluggish just cruising and when i come to a light, the car will rock back as it rolls to a stop or hold itself on a slight grade whereas normally the car will just slowly roll to a stop and if its on a grade, itll roll back/forward.
on my ex's car, i;
Swapped porportioning valves
-disassembled and cleaned them after swapping didnt cure it
swapped master cylinders w/ known-to-be-good units
-disassembled and cleaned them after swapping didnt cure it
Swapped ABS solenoid valve blocks
-unit from my 91 had a clogged Front-right channel and still didnt cure it
Swapped brake pads
-new pads installed when swapped pads didnt cure it
Swapped front calipers
-used units from my current 89, new units scavenged from my old 91 when the 89 units didnt cure it
Swapped caliper brackets with sliders
-lubed existing slider pins, swapped entire unit when lube didnt cure it
finally, i ended up completely removing the ABS unit and making brake lines to bypass it. but i heard thru the grapevine that a few years after i did the removal, her car began locking up the front calipers AGAIN even after she did a full non-ABS brake line conversion.
as you can tell, throwing parts at her car did not fix the problem completely. idk what to do about it. i know toyota has a special machine that can bleed the ABS system and cycle all the solenoids/valves at extremely high pressures... i wonder if thatd remove any/all contaminants that could possibly jam up my moving brake hydraulics?
please tell me someone has encountered this and actually figured it out :1zhelp:
my ex's car did it and my old 91 did it. when her car started doing it, it was so bad you could see the front rotors glowing at night, the car was boosting at a steady speed and it began to overheat. i dont know if the caliper piston is sticking in the bore, the brake fluid pressure cant bleed back or the caliper slider pins are worn/seizing. but, when the car sits for an hour or more, the caliper releases its grip on the rotor and the car will roll freely again. right now, my car is only doing it "mildly". the car feels sluggish just cruising and when i come to a light, the car will rock back as it rolls to a stop or hold itself on a slight grade whereas normally the car will just slowly roll to a stop and if its on a grade, itll roll back/forward.
on my ex's car, i;
Swapped porportioning valves
-disassembled and cleaned them after swapping didnt cure it
swapped master cylinders w/ known-to-be-good units
-disassembled and cleaned them after swapping didnt cure it
Swapped ABS solenoid valve blocks
-unit from my 91 had a clogged Front-right channel and still didnt cure it
Swapped brake pads
-new pads installed when swapped pads didnt cure it
Swapped front calipers
-used units from my current 89, new units scavenged from my old 91 when the 89 units didnt cure it
Swapped caliper brackets with sliders
-lubed existing slider pins, swapped entire unit when lube didnt cure it
finally, i ended up completely removing the ABS unit and making brake lines to bypass it. but i heard thru the grapevine that a few years after i did the removal, her car began locking up the front calipers AGAIN even after she did a full non-ABS brake line conversion.
as you can tell, throwing parts at her car did not fix the problem completely. idk what to do about it. i know toyota has a special machine that can bleed the ABS system and cycle all the solenoids/valves at extremely high pressures... i wonder if thatd remove any/all contaminants that could possibly jam up my moving brake hydraulics?
please tell me someone has encountered this and actually figured it out :1zhelp: