Spongy brakes after Cleaning pads.

Spongy brakes after Cleaning pads.

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Discussion

BarringtonL

Original Poster:

66 posts

147 months

Thursday 7th November 2013
quotequote all
Its the first time i have checked the brake pads on my recently accuired '02 Ford Galaxy TDI .
I followed the Haynes manual, and jacked it up removed front wheels and took apart the calipers to measure and clean the brake pads.

It took me ages as there was a lot of crust etc to clean away and i have never done it before.

I put the wheels back on and drove off and immediatly noticed the brakes were very spongy.

Having searched online for the reason why, its seems it could be air in the system. Only thing is i didn't change the pads, i only cleaned and put the old ones back. I didn't push the piston in the caliper back at all as i didn't need to.

Could it be air? if so how did it happen?

The only other explanation i have read is that it could be that i but the caliper retainer clips back on incorrectly, i thought i had done them properly but will have to check.

Annoyingly as i have crap on street parking away form home it isn't the easiest to check, but this is what i will do at the next possible time.

Is there anything else i can check whilst i do this, if the clips are not the culprits?

Thanks

TheEnd

15,370 posts

189 months

Thursday 7th November 2013
quotequote all
How did you clean them?
Maybe you've flattened off some peaks and grooves and it is going to need a bit of driving to bed back to the right "shape" to match the disc.

BarringtonL

Original Poster:

66 posts

147 months

Thursday 7th November 2013
quotequote all
With brake cleaner, didn't really scrap anything off of the pads, maostly roeund the caliper area. Definetly feels a lot spongier and takes more travel on the pedal to stop.

trickywoo

11,842 posts

231 months

Thursday 7th November 2013
quotequote all
Could be that you have done more harm than good and pushed crud past the dust seals.

If you didn't touch the bleed nipples and no fluid 'escaped' you are highly unlikely to have introduced air to the system.

How worn were the pads?

BarringtonL

Original Poster:

66 posts

147 months

Thursday 7th November 2013
quotequote all
Not very worn, think they were about 15mm including the backing plate. Which seal do you think i could have pushed crud into?

How annoying, will have to take it to the garage if i can't sort it myself.

ch427

9,001 posts

234 months

Thursday 7th November 2013
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are the flexi caliper hoses ok and not kinked?

BarringtonL

Original Poster:

66 posts

147 months

Thursday 7th November 2013
quotequote all
Thanks, i'll check that aswell. I'm hoping that it is the pad retaining clips, i cant remember them being that hard to put back on, so i may have done them incorrectly. I've ssen a couple of post online where people have done this.

BarringtonL

Original Poster:

66 posts

147 months

Thursday 7th November 2013
quotequote all
I'm going to have to repack them if not. Wouldn't be so bad if i had a driveway!

duncancallum

839 posts

179 months

Thursday 7th November 2013
quotequote all
If the discs are ridged the pads will need to bed in. Go give it a run with a fair bit of light braking to settle them in. They won't of gone back to exactly the same position.

Oh and I need to ask:

You put them back in the right order?

Edited by duncancallum on Thursday 7th November 19:26

BarringtonL

Original Poster:

66 posts

147 months

Thursday 7th November 2013
quotequote all
duncancallum said:
If the discs are ridged the pads will need to bed in. Go give it a run with a fair bit of light braking to settle them in.
Ah ok, i didn't realise you needed to do this even when you put old pads in.

BarringtonL

Original Poster:

66 posts

147 months

Thursday 7th November 2013
quotequote all
duncancallum said:
You put them back in the right order?

Edited by duncancallum on Thursday 7th November 19:26
How do you mean?

Super Slo Mo

5,368 posts

199 months

Thursday 7th November 2013
quotequote all
He means each pad going back into the same side of the disk and the same caliper it came out of. If you didn't, the ridges and valleys on the pad and disk won't match, so you might get softer braking for a little while.

You might have contaminated the pads a little with the brake cleaner, a good, hard stop should shift it though.


BarringtonL

Original Poster:

66 posts

147 months

Thursday 7th November 2013
quotequote all
Right ok, i definetly put them back right. I Was quite liberal with the brake cleaner though frown


I saw this on another forum:

'I did this dumb mistake and funny enough, found someone else did the exact same mistake. Maybe a common mistake if you've not done a brake job in a while and work on these Volvos.

Check your retaining clips to make sure they are properly clipped to caliper and tensioned. I put one of my retaining clips on wrong and didn't have tension. The caliper would twist during braking and not get all of your pad surface on the rotors.

I had very deep brake pedal travels as well when I had this mistake.'

I know its a Volvo but could be applicable.

Locknut

653 posts

138 months

Thursday 7th November 2013
quotequote all
My guess is that one of the pads is not seated correctly (assuming they are in their original positions as suggested above). Unfortunately you will have to open them up again to check. The good side is that you are unlikely to have done any harm and you will not have to buy any new bits.

BarringtonL

Original Poster:

66 posts

147 months

Thursday 7th November 2013
quotequote all
I'm going to do exactly that at the earliest opportunity. Oh well its all a learning curve, i've learnt since i started tinkering with my car that nothing is ever as simple it seems as first!

duncancallum

839 posts

179 months

Thursday 7th November 2013
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Where are you? If your near me I'd gladly offer a hand

BarringtonL

Original Poster:

66 posts

147 months

Friday 8th November 2013
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Im in Norwich, i can see from your profile you are in the North East, thanks for the offer though!

I need a bloody driveway, on street away from home parking is a real problem when it comes to working on your car. Finding myself with driveway envy.

duncancallum

839 posts

179 months

Friday 8th November 2013
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North East, how dare you. Lancashire .

BarringtonL

Original Poster:

66 posts

147 months

Tuesday 12th November 2013
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duncancallum said:
North East, how dare you. Lancashire .
Ha just ssen this.

For anyone interested i eventually had a chance to get the wheels off and i HAD put the pad retainer clips on wrong!

Its surprising how much of a differnce it makes, the brakes feel fine now.


Locknut

653 posts

138 months

Tuesday 12th November 2013
quotequote all
Thanks for coming back about this, it's nice to know what happened in the end.