Brake bleeding- what a bleeding pleasure that is!
Took 5.5 litres of DOT4 to completely flush the system. The rear calipers were the worst. Interesting that as part of the MOT the week before I bought it, the rear cross pipes were replaced. My guess is that whoever did the job just bled the brakes in the old fashioned way, by opening nipple and pressing pedal.
That alone would account for my apalling brakes. The fact that I bled out 1/3 litre of what appeared to be milk from the rear was also a bit of a worry.
Anyway, all fluid now clean and bright, new pads fitted, new accumulator fitted, all sliders free, pistons easily pushed back with no seal damage or rust so I'm now confident that even if I can't get the car to go, I can get it to stop!
Now for a crawl about with a grease gun before I put wheels back on and surrender to the icy temperatures.
EDIT- definitely quitting time, Was wondering how my NSF tyre had such low tread, lost its centre cap and i hadn't noticed, When I dropped car to floor it was also flat! Spent a few minutes wondering where LR gremlin was hiding before realising I'd refitted the spare tyre :(
South Hams, Devon
Currently caring for (in order of attention demanded):
- 2002 4.6 Range Rover Vogue SE LPG- Zavoli Alesei, Zeta Super, Matrix injectors (Still slightly internally incontinent)
- 1995 4.6 Range Rover HSE LPG (other half's Daily Driver)