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help setting up booster delete and retain ABS

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    help setting up booster delete and retain ABS

    I am on the tail end of a months long project repairing accident damage, turning my engine bay into a throne for the motor to sit inside of, and totally rebuilding the brake system.

    I am using the massive single MC booster delete, a 19/19mm MC from an older VW, retaining ABS (albeit relocated), a rear proportioning valve, front wilwood 4 piston calipers with BP-20 pads and vw corrado discs, rear oem calipers and stoptech street pads (subject to change).

    I have installed everything, bled the system 4 times now, managed to jump the relays/solenoids in the ABS unit to cycle it as I bleed (to clear out any remaining air?), and I have a mooshy pedal. The pedal isn't hard at all, it gets progressively harder to press the further I push it until it's nearly at the end of it's travel. At that point I'm pressing very hard and the car slows, but I can't lock up the brakes at all, and I'm really stomping on them. One thought I had was perhaps the MC I chose isn't appropriate for the front calipers. I will be picking up a 22/22mm MC from a vw corrado to try out tonight. If this doesn't improve things, I'll bypass the ABS to see if it's got air in it that I haven't been able to purge.

    Does anyone have input on this topic given my described situation? What setups (MCs, calipers, pads) have others run successfully?



    Here are some pictures of my system currently.

    Overview:




    MC, prop valve, and lines running to the ABS:




    Detail of the prop valve:




    ABS relocation under the driver side fender, directly in front of the wheel:







    Lastly, this car's purpose is autox, DEs, weekend canyon carving fun and event/show attendance
    '89 325i OBD2 S52 BUILD THREAD
    Shadetree30


    #2
    Initially, I suspect the proportioning valve. in theory, you don't need it with ABS. Altho
    I see why you'd want it... but it could be messing with the valving in the ABS.

    And then, looking at how the ABS pump is so low, I wonder if maybe air's getting trapped
    in your (very pretty) brake lines somewhere.

    Beyond that, yes, a 22mm master will shorten your travel, but give you an even harder pedal.

    ...aaaand that's about all I know.

    t
    now, sometimes I just mess with people. It's more entertaining that way. george graves

    Comment


      #3
      Try taking the prop valve out. You're cutting rear pressure and don't really need to. Helped me at least.
      sigpic

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by TobyB View Post
        Initially, I suspect the proportioning valve. in theory, you don't need it with ABS. Altho
        I see why you'd want it... but it could be messing with the valving in the ABS.

        And then, looking at how the ABS pump is so low, I wonder if maybe air's getting trapped
        in your (very pretty) brake lines somewhere.

        Beyond that, yes, a 22mm master will shorten your travel, but give you an even harder pedal.

        ...aaaand that's about all I know.

        t
        Thanks. Wouldn't I need the prop valve to help balance the front/rear brakes? Especially now that the fronts are much more powerful than they were before? I mean, even originally the car has a fixed prop valve. Also these abs units are in several models with different braking requirements...

        And regarding ABS placement, yes it's lower than before, but it was always lower than the reservoir/MC even as original. Same with most of the lines if you compare, I didn't drastically change the geometry I don't think

        Someone pointed out that the MC should be bench bled before installation and before bleeding the calipers. I didn't do that, actually never heard of it, and even the paperwork that came with the new MC didn't say anything about it. After further reading, kinda sounds like that's an important step. Do you think that could cause the issue? Still trapping air in the MC somewhere?

        Originally posted by e30_302 View Post
        Try taking the prop valve out. You're cutting rear pressure and don't really need to. Helped me at least.
        With the valve fully open (it is currently) there is no pressure reduction. And won't I need the prop valve to help balance front/rear bias with the bbk?
        '89 325i OBD2 S52 BUILD THREAD
        Shadetree30

        Comment


          #5
          It does sounds like there's still air in the system, unless your front BBK total piston area is something insanely large.

          Do you know what size pistons you have in the Wilwoods?

          Originally posted by whysimon
          WTF is hello Kitty (I'm 28 with no kids and I don't have cable)

          Comment


            #6
            The proportioning valve can only reduce rear brake pressure- if your front calipers are
            bigger than stock hydraulically, then you'll have increased front brake, not rear.

            The stock early ABS leaves the (pretty close to ideal) 70/30 split, then adds abs on
            top of it. It has a valve in the rear line, but it doesn't SEEM to be a proportioning
            valve, more a 'delay' valve to keep the rears from getting pressure before the fronts..

            The later ABS uses that funky split (22/17?) master cylinder. I initially thought they
            ran the 17mm to the back to add extra rear brake that the ABS then modulated out
            when you braked hard, but it's been too long since I took it apart.

            As to bench bleeding, that's a Chevy thing- they love it. Sometimes a bubble gets stuck
            in the master, and it's a bear to get out, but usually you can pop off the offending
            line, let it bleed into a bottle, then reattach successfully. I have a cut- off piece of
            brake line and tubing that works pretty well for that. I've used it twice- once on the 2002,
            once on an RX7.

            The other thing generically I've found- hit it with a hammer. As in, tap the calipers a
            few times, and re- bleed. Sometimes that helps with the smaller air bubbles that love
            to stick to the castings and not float up to the top.
            Also, go out and romp on it. Heat and vibration will help float air out, and the pressure
            will seat the pads and get mechanical spring out of things. It's a little contradictory,
            as you'd like good brakes BEFORE you go, but it often works.

            hth

            t
            now, sometimes I just mess with people. It's more entertaining that way. george graves

            Comment


              #7
              Wilwood says you can get full line pressure with the knob turned all the way out, but I don't believe it. Maybe it's my imagination but my car stops better without it. UUC front kit, stock rear, Fox Mustang master (21mm), and I still want more rear brake bias.
              sigpic

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by FredK View Post
                It does sounds like there's still air in the system, unless your front BBK total piston area is something insanely large.

                Do you know what size pistons you have in the Wilwoods?
                Yes, they are 4 piston X 1.38". The standard calipers that pair with the 280mm corrado rotors. And the 19/19 MC is also recommended by massive.
                Originally posted by TobyB View Post
                The proportioning valve can only reduce rear brake pressure- if your front calipers are
                bigger than stock hydraulically, then you'll have increased front brake, not rear.

                The stock early ABS leaves the (pretty close to ideal) 70/30 split, then adds abs on
                top of it. It has a valve in the rear line, but it doesn't SEEM to be a proportioning
                valve, more a 'delay' valve to keep the rears from getting pressure before the fronts..

                The later ABS uses that funky split (22/17?) master cylinder. I initially thought they
                ran the 17mm to the back to add extra rear brake that the ABS then modulated out
                when you braked hard, but it's been too long since I took it apart.

                As to bench bleeding, that's a Chevy thing- they love it. Sometimes a bubble gets stuck
                in the master, and it's a bear to get out, but usually you can pop off the offending
                line, let it bleed into a bottle, then reattach successfully. I have a cut- off piece of
                brake line and tubing that works pretty well for that. I've used it twice- once on the 2002,
                once on an RX7.

                The other thing generically I've found- hit it with a hammer. As in, tap the calipers a
                few times, and re- bleed. Sometimes that helps with the smaller air bubbles that love
                to stick to the castings and not float up to the top.
                Also, go out and romp on it. Heat and vibration will help float air out, and the pressure
                will seat the pads and get mechanical spring out of things. It's a little contradictory,
                as you'd like good brakes BEFORE you go, but it often works.

                hth

                t
                Makes sense about the prop valve, so I guess I may not need it, but can I not just set it to full open for now?

                I have the later ABS and MC. It's the 22/17 MC and I also had the "prop valve" on the rear line.

                I guess I could try bleeding bubbles out of the MC on the car like you describe. And I also knew of the "knocking calipers with hammer" - did that while bleeding twice. I did drive it already too. First time the brakes were seriously bad, couldn't really stop the car. Bled again, cycled ABS solenoids, and drove and it felt better, but still not very good.

                Someone else with this brake setup (booster delete and wilwood bbk) recommended a 25/25 MC and said it felt good. I'm wondering if the MC is just too small and not moving enough fluid.
                '89 325i OBD2 S52 BUILD THREAD
                Shadetree30

                Comment


                  #9
                  A 25mm master is gonna need gorilla legs. I imagine that's like standing on a brick- but some like it that way. I really like the 21 I have, good for my tastes.

                  Edit- forgot I had a 1" master at one point (25.4mm). I hated it.
                  sigpic

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Thats what I thought. Which car did the 21mm MC come from? Part number? It also seems the 733 had a 22/22 MC. I was considering.

                    Sent from my SM-G920T using Tapatalk
                    Last edited by Sh3rpak!ng; 05-26-2016, 11:06 AM.
                    '89 325i OBD2 S52 BUILD THREAD
                    Shadetree30

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Just called wilwood tech support and they recommended a 7/8" (22.2mm) MC to go with the 4x1.38" piston calipers and a 6:1 pedal ratio.

                      Anyone know of a bmw, or similar style 22/22 MC? I just bought and compared a vw corrado/jetta (I think) 22/22 MC last night but the geometry of the unit is way off unfortunately.


                      comparison pic I took last night... comparing the piston stopping point vs flange between the two, the vw unit is about 1" further inward. Too much to make up for with rod adjustment.

                      '89 325i OBD2 S52 BUILD THREAD
                      Shadetree30

                      Comment


                        #12
                        A Fox body Mustang. The mounting holes need to be slotted to fit, it's not a direct fitment.
                        sigpic

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by e30_302 View Post
                          A Fox body Mustang. The mounting holes need to be slotted to fit, it's not a direct fitment.
                          I can work with that. What year range should I look for? P/N?
                          '89 325i OBD2 S52 BUILD THREAD
                          Shadetree30

                          Comment


                            #15
                            Thanks man!
                            '89 325i OBD2 S52 BUILD THREAD
                            Shadetree30

                            Comment

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