Sorry for the long post, thanks in advance to anyone who reads and can help me resolve this lingering brake issue!
Ive been chasing on track braking performance issues with a long/spongy pedal for the better part of this year. I was getting very long brake pedal travel in sessions, and the pedal was very spongy even after on the drive home my previous track day in May. Running Castrol SRF, CSL/ZCP brake setup, and G-LOC track pads. The brake master cylinder showed no signed of leaks and with engine off the pedal wouldnt keep going down to the floor, but I knew the brake fluid was in need of a flush and the ABS likely had air in it so over the summer break I did the following to address it in hopes of resolving the long pedal and lack of braking confidence issue in time for returning to the track in the fall/winter (too hot in SFL for summer tracking anyway).
Over summer break:
-Bled ABS using INPA at all 4 corners: did have air
-Flushed system brake fluid with fresh Castrol SRF 1L bottle: old fluid was probably degraded and with moisture, hadn't fully flushed in a couple years
(both of the above done with Motive Power bleeder)
-Installed BBK calipers just as an upgrade for bettering braking gain and heat capacity: new Freakyparts Megane RS front with rear 996 Brembos
-New G-LOC track pads to go with new bigger calipers. R16 front R10 rear compounds
Still running OEM CSL/ZCP rotors front and rear
After the above were installed with new street Akebono pads, the pedal was very firm and felt very good. I was relieved and figured the pedal issue should be resolved and that the BMC was not faulty.
1st track day with the new setup yesterday at Homestead Miami Speedway road course and halfway through the first session pedal gets long again, at one point so long I was worried the master had surely gone bad!
But then thinking maybe its pad knockback w the now fixed calipers I started left foot tapping the pedal before the hard braking events and yeah it would firm up the pedal once I got on it into the braking zone. But again couldn't that also be a symptom of air getting sucked in by a bad seal or something? Basically I'm thinking that compressing the air in the system w the left foot taps would feel the same as pushing the pistons back if there was knockback? Another clue is the pedal was spongy even after the long main front straight of HMS, where I'd assume there wouldn't have been much knockback and I wouldn't let foot tap before Turn 1, and basically couldn't even get the car to stop as quickly, felt like it was still on throttle even!
This is now a lingering issue and dont know what the cause is other than the two items above, I dont want to spend the time and money replacing the BMC if it doesnt resolve the issue and really it's just pad knockback, or something else with the car. Even now the next day with the engine off sitting in the car and pressing the brake pedal it stays firm and doesnt keep going down to the floor, which points to the master being OK. Or is it something else system related that could be causing this? Maybe a vacuum leak at the booster? Other factors being wheel bearings, while I dont know their history and havent been replaced recently or in my ownership, there is no wheel play or clicking/noise from them that I can tell.
Thanks in advance for any help diagnosing this! I really want to make the most of the winter track season this year!
Ive been chasing on track braking performance issues with a long/spongy pedal for the better part of this year. I was getting very long brake pedal travel in sessions, and the pedal was very spongy even after on the drive home my previous track day in May. Running Castrol SRF, CSL/ZCP brake setup, and G-LOC track pads. The brake master cylinder showed no signed of leaks and with engine off the pedal wouldnt keep going down to the floor, but I knew the brake fluid was in need of a flush and the ABS likely had air in it so over the summer break I did the following to address it in hopes of resolving the long pedal and lack of braking confidence issue in time for returning to the track in the fall/winter (too hot in SFL for summer tracking anyway).
Over summer break:
-Bled ABS using INPA at all 4 corners: did have air
-Flushed system brake fluid with fresh Castrol SRF 1L bottle: old fluid was probably degraded and with moisture, hadn't fully flushed in a couple years
(both of the above done with Motive Power bleeder)
-Installed BBK calipers just as an upgrade for bettering braking gain and heat capacity: new Freakyparts Megane RS front with rear 996 Brembos
-New G-LOC track pads to go with new bigger calipers. R16 front R10 rear compounds
Still running OEM CSL/ZCP rotors front and rear
After the above were installed with new street Akebono pads, the pedal was very firm and felt very good. I was relieved and figured the pedal issue should be resolved and that the BMC was not faulty.
1st track day with the new setup yesterday at Homestead Miami Speedway road course and halfway through the first session pedal gets long again, at one point so long I was worried the master had surely gone bad!
But then thinking maybe its pad knockback w the now fixed calipers I started left foot tapping the pedal before the hard braking events and yeah it would firm up the pedal once I got on it into the braking zone. But again couldn't that also be a symptom of air getting sucked in by a bad seal or something? Basically I'm thinking that compressing the air in the system w the left foot taps would feel the same as pushing the pistons back if there was knockback? Another clue is the pedal was spongy even after the long main front straight of HMS, where I'd assume there wouldn't have been much knockback and I wouldn't let foot tap before Turn 1, and basically couldn't even get the car to stop as quickly, felt like it was still on throttle even!
This is now a lingering issue and dont know what the cause is other than the two items above, I dont want to spend the time and money replacing the BMC if it doesnt resolve the issue and really it's just pad knockback, or something else with the car. Even now the next day with the engine off sitting in the car and pressing the brake pedal it stays firm and doesnt keep going down to the floor, which points to the master being OK. Or is it something else system related that could be causing this? Maybe a vacuum leak at the booster? Other factors being wheel bearings, while I dont know their history and havent been replaced recently or in my ownership, there is no wheel play or clicking/noise from them that I can tell.
Thanks in advance for any help diagnosing this! I really want to make the most of the winter track season this year!
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