Boxster S 987 binding brakes
Boxster S 987 binding brakes
Author
Discussion

Chris944

Original Poster:

353 posts

246 months

Monday 27th January
quotequote all
Help. My Boxster S 987 has decided it doesn't want to leave the garage and the brakes, the rear ones I think, seized up after I'd reversed a few feet. That is to say the car refused to reverse any further despiterevving the enginevquite a lot. I'm guessing it;s the brakes - there is nothing on the garage floor impedingthe car's progress. The car has done c109,000 miles and has been sat on a trickle charger for c2 weeks after a return from Wales to south London in rainy weather. I'm wondering if this kind of problem has occurred before and if the fix is straightforward?

Any help would be much appreciated.

Discombobulate

5,637 posts

202 months

Monday 27th January
quotequote all
Try pulling forward, then back again a few times. The rocking back and forth should unbind the brake(s). Or just give it plenty of throttle in reverse...

PS and don't leave the handbrake on in future wink Just put it in gear.

Edited by Discombobulate on Monday 27th January 20:16

Chris944

Original Poster:

353 posts

246 months

Monday 27th January
quotequote all
Very discombobulating :-) I'll try the rocking.

Chris944

Original Poster:

353 posts

246 months

Monday 27th January
quotequote all
The rocking did not work :-(

Ken986

288 posts

140 months

Monday 27th January
quotequote all
Did you park with the handbrake applied? Likely the shoes have bound themselves inside the disc drums particularly if it was parked up after being wet.

Can you jack up each rear wheel and , out of gear , try turning the wheel ? Remove each wheel and strike the hub of each disc with a hammer to try and break the grip of the shoes.


Popolou

1,089 posts

223 months

Monday 27th January
quotequote all
Let the car idle for a good while and the heat transferred to the drums plus a little more rocking could free them up.

LarJammer

2,350 posts

226 months

Monday 27th January
quotequote all
The handbrake shoes have probably fallen to bits if it moved a bit, then locked up. Gonna have to take it apart / get it recovered I'm afraid.

Discombobulate

5,637 posts

202 months

Monday 27th January
quotequote all
LarJammer said:
The handbrake shoes have probably fallen to bits if it moved a bit, then locked up. Gonna have to take it apart / get it recovered I'm afraid.
Is there a mark on the ground where one wheel was dragged? if it did roll normally both sides initially it must be what Lar Jammer says - or worse something in the transmission....

mlsporsche

94 posts

95 months

Tuesday 28th January
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Maybe the ABS has a fault

Chris944

Original Poster:

353 posts

246 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
Thank you for these suggestions - some of which are frightening such as broken handbrake shoes. Freeing each wheel in turn sounds worth a try. However a garage is coming to pick it up so they can can work the problem.

Magnum 475

3,843 posts

148 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
It’s usually the parking brake.

Had this a few years back on mine, after foolishly taking it to a non-specialist to replace rear discs & pads. Left a few weeks with the parking brake off, and they still seized on. Trailered away to someone who knew what they were doing, problem solved. I always take it for a ‘brake drying run’ after I’ve washed it though.


Philvrs

648 posts

113 months

Tuesday 28th January
quotequote all
Sounds very much like delaminated handbrake shoes, does your handbrake have the same travel / feeling as normal? The delaminated material can jam near the actuator and make the handbrake travel less rather than more as expected.

dickbastardly

450 posts

224 months

Saturday 1st February
quotequote all
I cant remember if it was the 987 or the 981 but one of them had a problem with the brake peddle sticking, it was something to do with when you pressed the brake there was a tube (or something) that stuck so the brake would not release.
I had to put my foot under the brake peddle and lift up to release the brake.
Just a thought.

Ken986

288 posts

140 months

Saturday 1st February
quotequote all
dickbdly said:
I cant remember if it was the 987 or the 981 but one of them had a problem with the brake peddle sticking, it was something to do with when you pressed the brake there was a tube (or something) that stuck so the brake would not release.
I had to put my foot under the brake peddle and lift up to release the brake.
Just a thought.
981

I hope the OP comes back with an update

Chris944

Original Poster:

353 posts

246 months

Friday 7th February
quotequote all
It's fixed. The handbrake barke pads had attached to the disks. Attempting to rock the car backwards and forwards failed, until a recovery guy tried on a particularly cold morning and freed them after a graunching noise. Weston Porsche in Beckenham found that the brake pads had disintegrate dinto bits and one spring was broken. So, £450 later plus the recovery fee, I have a repaired Boxster. Phew!!

The lesson from this is that after a long drive in the rain do not leave your Boxster handbrake on for 2 weeks.

Thank you again for all the positive suggestions and help.