VrWagz1
The Wagon on Wheels..
- Joined
- May 5, 2008
- Messages
- 2,438
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- 48
- Location
- wollongong
- Members Ride
- VE SSV MY09 Auto Wagon
Vt Booster and Master in your V8 VR with ABS
Ok this is for noobs like myself trying to find some info on how hard it is putting in the vt booster and m/c into the vr. So like me you've gone out and put the vt rotors and calipers on your vr and despite your best efforts you cant agree that the pedal is ok. Its way too long and dosn't do your new brakes any justice and are performing very poorly. So I went and got myself a vt booster and master cylinder, and lucky for me I got it off another person who had already made the modified mounting bracket up , If you need to know how to make the adaptor bracket see down below "post #18". In the mean time, as a word description, you need to bend in the corners of the old bracket till they touch, then weld a peice of flat plate on the end of it, and re-drill that plate for the 4 booster bolts. You will also need to re-drill the pushrod brake pedal hole back a bit(110-113mm from the base of the bracket i think from memory but CHECK FIRST by installing and marking it.)
The only thing not shown here is a heavy duty strut tower bracket, which is not nessacary but it recommend it. I cut one out of a peice of RHS cause i could utilise the edges as a pre-bent 90 degree angle. All i needed to do was trace the bracket shape on the rhs and used the grinder to cut it out.
Ok so this for those of you who are a little unsure about changing the Booster and M/C out and bending up the brake lines and worrying about the abs, like myself here is a simple guide with a few pics. Its not particularly hard anywayz, just takes a few hours of ur time.
You will need a 3/8 socket set, an assortment of metric spanners and maybe a 3/8 spanner, imperial Allen key (for rocker cover bolts), A bottle or 2 of break fluid. Screwdriver pliers ect..
Removal of the old
1. I put the front end of the car up on ramps, because about 2/3rds of the time it was a better working height. Then start pulling off the covers off under the the drivers compartment. Ok were ready to start.
2. Crack the nuts of the brake lines on the master cylinder, just to be sure they will undo. I found the front brake line (the bigger one 13mm) cracked ok, but the rear (10mm) was seized and I simply rounded the nut. So I bashed on a 3/8 spanner and cracked it with that. Now leave them there finger tight. Pull off the brake fail light wiring plug from the underside of the m/c and crack the bolt on the strut tower bracket.
3. Inside under the drivers compartment you will see the pushrod attached to the brake pedal and the nuts holding the booster to the fire wall (12mm). Crack the nuts on the fire wall and slide the clip off the brake pedal holding the pushrod on.
4. You now need to get the vacuum hose and plastic fitting out of the booster. It took me about half hour of stuffing about to workout how to get it out because I didn’t want to break it. Turns out it’s just a case of pull harder and on a bit of an angle.
5. Ok everything should be loose now and ready to pull out. Stuff heaps of newspaper or rag under the master cylinder to catch any dripping brake fluid(As it will strip your paint). You can now take all the nuts, brackets, brake line off in one hit and just pull it out.
6. Tape over the brake lines and vacuum hose to stop any dirt getting in.
In with the new
1. It is best now to bench bleed your new master cylinder so you don’t put any air through the abs unit. Plug all the holes with some bungs
(But not attached to booster while doing this).
Now leave one of the bungs loose and push in the back of the cylinder fairly hard to force the air out that bung, then close it shut and let the cylinder out and it will draw in fluid from the reservoir. Repeat around the other 2 bungs. *Edit. Alternitavly after you have it installed and are ready to hook in the brake lines have someone pump the brake pedal a few times while you hold your fingers over the holes on the master cylinder and let the air out till fliud comes out the holes. Then do your best to simply plug in the brake line before you lose too much fluid.
2. I found that because the VT booster is slightly bigger, it just didn’t slide back in (doh), it jams between the rocker cover and the strut tower. So I had to take the rocker cover off. Easy to do, there are 2 Allen head bolts in the top and 4 around the base lip and it just lifts out. But if you know the right places to jack the engine to tilt it slightly to one side, then that may be easier, as I spent about an hour trying to get the back bolt back in the rocker cover:bang:. Was just a real pain to get to once the bigger booster was in the way. (EDIT: from experiance now, it is definatly recommended to jack the engine over just a smidge, so much less stuffin about and no worrying your rocker gasket might start leaking)
3. The booster fits in now and you can make sure the pushrod finished up on the right side of the brake pedal and put the nuts back on the fire wall studs to hold it all steady and put the rocker cover back on.
4. Ok we need to hook the brake lines back in. Being a vr there is no adaptors needed. Simply just need to bend the brake lines around to suit the new m/c configuration. The lines bend very easily by hand, just be carful and don’t kink them. The front brake line pretty much lines up and bolts straight back in. I had to only bend mine slightly as it was in the way of the brake fail wiring plug. The rear brake line is a bit of a problem though, as it was miles away from being in the right spot as it now goes into the side on the m/c and not in the bottom. The rear has two, 90 degree bends where it goes across and back up to the abs unit. Simply do your best to straighten these out a bit to get a bit of length on it, then you can put a nice radius on it so it will bend around into its new home.
5. Almost over. Simply install your new strut tower bracket and bolt it all up. Put your clip back onto the pedal to hold the pushrod on. Check the little brake light and cruise cancel switch above, where the brake pedals bump stop is(i had to adjust mine slightly as the cruise control would disengadge when i hit a bump and vibrate the pedal + the brake lights were on almost instantly instead of waiting for a few mm of pedal travel first). Hook the return spring back onto the pedal if you took it off. Hook up the brake fail wiring and put the vacuum line back into the booster and your ready to bleed it all up :dance:
6. You should all know how to do a full bleed up your brakes so I’m not going into that, if your not sure on that, then get someone who knows what they are doing to help you, its very important to get all the air out of the lines, there is probably a how to somwhere here anywayz. *Edit. Just a note, dont go nuts on the brake pedal straight up when you start to bleed as the master cylinder will have some air in it still. So just some short gentle pumps to let the air out and the fluid in(note how the air bubbles up into the reservoir as you let the pedal out and it draws the fluid into the master again to refill it). Also(as a side note), long stokes on the new master(only if its second hand) can be bad as is will stroke the master's piston over its original travel working range and if it happens to have worn a little lip at the end of its working range you can somtimes damage the seals on the piston when pushing the piston over the lip. This can cause it to bypass and you will have fluid leaking out of the back of the master and running down the face of the booster. Worst case with my old one was the fluid dripped down onto the rail, stripped the paint and it started to rust costing me a small fortune to fix.
And the result is very pleasing. For the first time it is very easy to pull up the old wagon at the bottom of a hill and the calipers and rotors now feel like they are actually working properly and the pedal is nice and high again, I can actually pull up alot later than i used with confidence:w00t:. Ok that’s it, please feel free to leave any constructive criticism and things you would have done differently, or little tips and hints.
Ok this is for noobs like myself trying to find some info on how hard it is putting in the vt booster and m/c into the vr. So like me you've gone out and put the vt rotors and calipers on your vr and despite your best efforts you cant agree that the pedal is ok. Its way too long and dosn't do your new brakes any justice and are performing very poorly. So I went and got myself a vt booster and master cylinder, and lucky for me I got it off another person who had already made the modified mounting bracket up , If you need to know how to make the adaptor bracket see down below "post #18". In the mean time, as a word description, you need to bend in the corners of the old bracket till they touch, then weld a peice of flat plate on the end of it, and re-drill that plate for the 4 booster bolts. You will also need to re-drill the pushrod brake pedal hole back a bit(110-113mm from the base of the bracket i think from memory but CHECK FIRST by installing and marking it.)
The only thing not shown here is a heavy duty strut tower bracket, which is not nessacary but it recommend it. I cut one out of a peice of RHS cause i could utilise the edges as a pre-bent 90 degree angle. All i needed to do was trace the bracket shape on the rhs and used the grinder to cut it out.
Ok so this for those of you who are a little unsure about changing the Booster and M/C out and bending up the brake lines and worrying about the abs, like myself here is a simple guide with a few pics. Its not particularly hard anywayz, just takes a few hours of ur time.
You will need a 3/8 socket set, an assortment of metric spanners and maybe a 3/8 spanner, imperial Allen key (for rocker cover bolts), A bottle or 2 of break fluid. Screwdriver pliers ect..
Removal of the old
1. I put the front end of the car up on ramps, because about 2/3rds of the time it was a better working height. Then start pulling off the covers off under the the drivers compartment. Ok were ready to start.
2. Crack the nuts of the brake lines on the master cylinder, just to be sure they will undo. I found the front brake line (the bigger one 13mm) cracked ok, but the rear (10mm) was seized and I simply rounded the nut. So I bashed on a 3/8 spanner and cracked it with that. Now leave them there finger tight. Pull off the brake fail light wiring plug from the underside of the m/c and crack the bolt on the strut tower bracket.
3. Inside under the drivers compartment you will see the pushrod attached to the brake pedal and the nuts holding the booster to the fire wall (12mm). Crack the nuts on the fire wall and slide the clip off the brake pedal holding the pushrod on.
4. You now need to get the vacuum hose and plastic fitting out of the booster. It took me about half hour of stuffing about to workout how to get it out because I didn’t want to break it. Turns out it’s just a case of pull harder and on a bit of an angle.
5. Ok everything should be loose now and ready to pull out. Stuff heaps of newspaper or rag under the master cylinder to catch any dripping brake fluid(As it will strip your paint). You can now take all the nuts, brackets, brake line off in one hit and just pull it out.
6. Tape over the brake lines and vacuum hose to stop any dirt getting in.
In with the new
1. It is best now to bench bleed your new master cylinder so you don’t put any air through the abs unit. Plug all the holes with some bungs
(But not attached to booster while doing this).
Now leave one of the bungs loose and push in the back of the cylinder fairly hard to force the air out that bung, then close it shut and let the cylinder out and it will draw in fluid from the reservoir. Repeat around the other 2 bungs. *Edit. Alternitavly after you have it installed and are ready to hook in the brake lines have someone pump the brake pedal a few times while you hold your fingers over the holes on the master cylinder and let the air out till fliud comes out the holes. Then do your best to simply plug in the brake line before you lose too much fluid.
2. I found that because the VT booster is slightly bigger, it just didn’t slide back in (doh), it jams between the rocker cover and the strut tower. So I had to take the rocker cover off. Easy to do, there are 2 Allen head bolts in the top and 4 around the base lip and it just lifts out. But if you know the right places to jack the engine to tilt it slightly to one side, then that may be easier, as I spent about an hour trying to get the back bolt back in the rocker cover:bang:. Was just a real pain to get to once the bigger booster was in the way. (EDIT: from experiance now, it is definatly recommended to jack the engine over just a smidge, so much less stuffin about and no worrying your rocker gasket might start leaking)
3. The booster fits in now and you can make sure the pushrod finished up on the right side of the brake pedal and put the nuts back on the fire wall studs to hold it all steady and put the rocker cover back on.
4. Ok we need to hook the brake lines back in. Being a vr there is no adaptors needed. Simply just need to bend the brake lines around to suit the new m/c configuration. The lines bend very easily by hand, just be carful and don’t kink them. The front brake line pretty much lines up and bolts straight back in. I had to only bend mine slightly as it was in the way of the brake fail wiring plug. The rear brake line is a bit of a problem though, as it was miles away from being in the right spot as it now goes into the side on the m/c and not in the bottom. The rear has two, 90 degree bends where it goes across and back up to the abs unit. Simply do your best to straighten these out a bit to get a bit of length on it, then you can put a nice radius on it so it will bend around into its new home.
5. Almost over. Simply install your new strut tower bracket and bolt it all up. Put your clip back onto the pedal to hold the pushrod on. Check the little brake light and cruise cancel switch above, where the brake pedals bump stop is(i had to adjust mine slightly as the cruise control would disengadge when i hit a bump and vibrate the pedal + the brake lights were on almost instantly instead of waiting for a few mm of pedal travel first). Hook the return spring back onto the pedal if you took it off. Hook up the brake fail wiring and put the vacuum line back into the booster and your ready to bleed it all up :dance:
6. You should all know how to do a full bleed up your brakes so I’m not going into that, if your not sure on that, then get someone who knows what they are doing to help you, its very important to get all the air out of the lines, there is probably a how to somwhere here anywayz. *Edit. Just a note, dont go nuts on the brake pedal straight up when you start to bleed as the master cylinder will have some air in it still. So just some short gentle pumps to let the air out and the fluid in(note how the air bubbles up into the reservoir as you let the pedal out and it draws the fluid into the master again to refill it). Also(as a side note), long stokes on the new master(only if its second hand) can be bad as is will stroke the master's piston over its original travel working range and if it happens to have worn a little lip at the end of its working range you can somtimes damage the seals on the piston when pushing the piston over the lip. This can cause it to bypass and you will have fluid leaking out of the back of the master and running down the face of the booster. Worst case with my old one was the fluid dripped down onto the rail, stripped the paint and it started to rust costing me a small fortune to fix.
And the result is very pleasing. For the first time it is very easy to pull up the old wagon at the bottom of a hill and the calipers and rotors now feel like they are actually working properly and the pedal is nice and high again, I can actually pull up alot later than i used with confidence:w00t:. Ok that’s it, please feel free to leave any constructive criticism and things you would have done differently, or little tips and hints.
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