1992 Accord LX coupe. When I got the car, the pedal went all the way to the floor. The master cylinder was almost empty and full of black "mud" at the bottom. installed the new looking (very clean housing and reservoir) from a 1991 LX sedan, bled all lines until clean fluid came out at each wheel. The pedal was still soft and had too much travel and the engine sped up when depressing the pedal.
Front pads didn't have a lot of material left, so I installed the loaded calipers from my wrecked 93 EX coupe with a lot of pad left. Rebled the system; still not happy with the pedal feel (long travel, but not continuously sinking).
I pulled the MC and realized there was still the old MC to booster seal in the booster and a new one on the MC. Removed the booster to try to check the position of the booster plunger vs. the depth of the plunger in the MC. Math worked out that there was about 0.050" clearance between the booster plunger and the MC piston; unlocked the booster rod and adjusted about 1/2 turn inward although it didn't seem to change the position of the plunger on the MC side. Adjusted the clevis to 4.6 inches per shop manual. Reinstalled everything (with only one good seal between the MC and booster), bled all four wheels (LR, RF, RR, LF); good clean air free fluid at all four wheels. With the engine not running, the pedal pumps up fairly high and hard; but when I started the engine and went to back out the driveway, the pedal travel increased considerably, but eventually stops (not sinking like MC is leaking). All the other threads I searched seemed to involve "sinking" pedals that indicated a MC leak. Should I have not messed with the booster?
Anyone have a cross section of the brake booster or taken one apart with pictures of the internals? I'd like to understand the internal workings better.
Front pads didn't have a lot of material left, so I installed the loaded calipers from my wrecked 93 EX coupe with a lot of pad left. Rebled the system; still not happy with the pedal feel (long travel, but not continuously sinking).
I pulled the MC and realized there was still the old MC to booster seal in the booster and a new one on the MC. Removed the booster to try to check the position of the booster plunger vs. the depth of the plunger in the MC. Math worked out that there was about 0.050" clearance between the booster plunger and the MC piston; unlocked the booster rod and adjusted about 1/2 turn inward although it didn't seem to change the position of the plunger on the MC side. Adjusted the clevis to 4.6 inches per shop manual. Reinstalled everything (with only one good seal between the MC and booster), bled all four wheels (LR, RF, RR, LF); good clean air free fluid at all four wheels. With the engine not running, the pedal pumps up fairly high and hard; but when I started the engine and went to back out the driveway, the pedal travel increased considerably, but eventually stops (not sinking like MC is leaking). All the other threads I searched seemed to involve "sinking" pedals that indicated a MC leak. Should I have not messed with the booster?
Anyone have a cross section of the brake booster or taken one apart with pictures of the internals? I'd like to understand the internal workings better.
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