Brake Failure at 70mph Car nearly caught fire XJS V12 Help me please!
#41
Just in order to Clear that up, I had no idea that the brakes had a fault, as She passed the MOT without a problem.
#42
No I wasn't! the car had been running perfectly, except for a banging on the exhaust, which I managed to quieten down after a few test drives without any problems.
#43
Im sorry if you perceive it as negative but when someone drives a car at high speed with known bad brakes and another asks for help on a forum and ignores everyone replies only to post an article stating the exact thing all the replies did how do you want me to respond?
Should I be positive and say I am glad he drove his car with bad brakes and that it was probably a good idea?
Should I respond to the fuel thread praising the OP for ignoring everyones posts?
You are being negative about my posts because the topic or op did something negative. That isn't my fault
Should I be positive and say I am glad he drove his car with bad brakes and that it was probably a good idea?
Should I respond to the fuel thread praising the OP for ignoring everyones posts?
You are being negative about my posts because the topic or op did something negative. That isn't my fault
With respect I think that you have got the wrong end of the stick, the brakes were working perfectly until the car broke down.
And then my mate who is a mechanic came to the rescue.
After which I asked for help on the Forum and was given lots of useful advice as to the best way of insuring that it doesn't happen again.
So as you may have gathered I'm replacing all the Calipers and everything in between regardless of cost.
#44
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: PHX some of the time
Posts: 117,683
Received 6,339 Likes
on
5,524 Posts
The following users liked this post:
orangeblossom (05-19-2014)
#45
Hi Sidescrollin
With respect I think that you have got the wrong end of the stick, the brakes were working perfectly until the car broke down.
And then my mate who is a mechanic came to the rescue.
After which I asked for help on the Forum and was given lots of useful advice as to the best way of insuring that it doesn't happen again.
So as you may have gathered I'm replacing all the Calipers and everything in between regardless of cost.
With respect I think that you have got the wrong end of the stick, the brakes were working perfectly until the car broke down.
And then my mate who is a mechanic came to the rescue.
After which I asked for help on the Forum and was given lots of useful advice as to the best way of insuring that it doesn't happen again.
So as you may have gathered I'm replacing all the Calipers and everything in between regardless of cost.
The direction I went with that in response to steve m was that this was a new thread. He never said otherwise and as you see " im confused, why did you drive it after knowing the brakes were bad" was not a negative post. I genuinely was confused and didn't consider the "bumping" action of forums.
I had to reiterate several times, but don't take it as being more critical. I simply thought this happened after and was trying to explain to Steve M how if this were the case it isn't my fault that a bad thing happened. Or that commenting on a negative event doesn't make me negative.
Obviously he jumped in before you could reply about my confusion
The following users liked this post:
orangeblossom (05-19-2014)
#46
I tend to agree with a lot of the advice here. The question isn't whether or not to replace the caliper, it's how much of the braking system to overhaul.
Given the circumstances, I would at the very least do a complete overhaul on the front brakes: calipers, pads, good quality rotors, and hoses only because they're so inexpensive. I would also bleed the entire system and replace with a high quality brake fluid. I'd also do a visual inspection of the other components, including the master cylinder, steel brake lines, and rear brakes.
If it were me and I was experiencing no other symptoms, I might leave the rest alone for a while. Looking at your sig, it looks like your car has inboard rear brakes. They're inherently difficult to work on. Unless you have someone that will overhaul the rear brakes for you that will do it for a great price, I'd leave them alone for now. The truth is that your front brakes do at least 80% of the stopping. If you lock up a rear caliper (been there) you will probably not loose all brakes like you did here. Further, you're more experienced now. You'll know exactly what's going on the next time you smell that smell!
As for the master cylinder, I'd wait until it shows signs of failure before you change it unless you have someone that will do it dirt cheap. The chances of an immediate catastrophic failure are extremely low. They are pretty durable and last a long time.
Given the circumstances, I would at the very least do a complete overhaul on the front brakes: calipers, pads, good quality rotors, and hoses only because they're so inexpensive. I would also bleed the entire system and replace with a high quality brake fluid. I'd also do a visual inspection of the other components, including the master cylinder, steel brake lines, and rear brakes.
If it were me and I was experiencing no other symptoms, I might leave the rest alone for a while. Looking at your sig, it looks like your car has inboard rear brakes. They're inherently difficult to work on. Unless you have someone that will overhaul the rear brakes for you that will do it for a great price, I'd leave them alone for now. The truth is that your front brakes do at least 80% of the stopping. If you lock up a rear caliper (been there) you will probably not loose all brakes like you did here. Further, you're more experienced now. You'll know exactly what's going on the next time you smell that smell!
As for the master cylinder, I'd wait until it shows signs of failure before you change it unless you have someone that will do it dirt cheap. The chances of an immediate catastrophic failure are extremely low. They are pretty durable and last a long time.
The following users liked this post:
orangeblossom (05-19-2014)
#47
The following users liked this post:
orangeblossom (05-20-2014)
#48
I tend to agree with a lot of the advice here. The question isn't whether or not to replace the caliper, it's how much of the braking system to overhaul.
Given the circumstances, I would at the very least do a complete overhaul on the front brakes: calipers, pads, good quality rotors, and hoses only because they're so inexpensive. I would also bleed the entire system and replace with a high quality brake fluid. I'd also do a visual inspection of the other components, including the master cylinder, steel brake lines, and rear brakes.
If it were me and I was experiencing no other symptoms, I might leave the rest alone for a while. Looking at your sig, it looks like your car has inboard rear brakes. They're inherently difficult to work on. Unless you have someone that will overhaul the rear brakes for you that will do it for a great price, I'd leave them alone for now. The truth is that your front brakes do at least 80% of the stopping. If you lock up a rear caliper (been there) you will probably not loose all brakes like you did here. Further, you're more experienced now. You'll know exactly what's going on the next time you smell that smell!
As for the master cylinder, I'd wait until it shows signs of failure before you change it unless you have someone that will do it dirt cheap. The chances of an immediate catastrophic failure are extremely low. They are pretty durable and last a long time.
Given the circumstances, I would at the very least do a complete overhaul on the front brakes: calipers, pads, good quality rotors, and hoses only because they're so inexpensive. I would also bleed the entire system and replace with a high quality brake fluid. I'd also do a visual inspection of the other components, including the master cylinder, steel brake lines, and rear brakes.
If it were me and I was experiencing no other symptoms, I might leave the rest alone for a while. Looking at your sig, it looks like your car has inboard rear brakes. They're inherently difficult to work on. Unless you have someone that will overhaul the rear brakes for you that will do it for a great price, I'd leave them alone for now. The truth is that your front brakes do at least 80% of the stopping. If you lock up a rear caliper (been there) you will probably not loose all brakes like you did here. Further, you're more experienced now. You'll know exactly what's going on the next time you smell that smell!
As for the master cylinder, I'd wait until it shows signs of failure before you change it unless you have someone that will do it dirt cheap. The chances of an immediate catastrophic failure are extremely low. They are pretty durable and last a long time.
I am doing a Complete (No Expense Spared) Overhaul of the Front Brake System, Calipers, Hoses and everything, except for the Master Cylinder, which should be OK.
After the Summer I will drop the rear IRS Cage and renew everything and although I am not a Pro Mechanic like some of you guys on here, the more I do the more I get to know.
So apart from relying on you guys to help keep me on track, calling in professional help is something that I would regard as a sign of failure on my part.
I remember the day I first got a V12, I opened the bonnet looked at the engine, then closed the bonnet/hood again!
A master piece it may have been but it looked so daunting that I didn't even know the way of to top up the Screen Washer bottle.
In a way I'm glad I had the major problem that I did as now I'm totally obsessed with knowing everything about my Car.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
BrentGardner
XJ XJ6 / XJ8 / XJR ( X350 & X358 )
28
04-26-2024 03:08 AM
FS[NorthEast]: 1991 xjs v12
DrScientist
PRIVATE For Sale / Trade or Buy Classifieds
5
12-09-2015 07:36 PM
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)