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#11
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![]() Jay Honeck wrote: Our A&P hates bleeding Cherokee brakes, but it's more of a repetitive pain than a really difficult procedure. He just climbs under the wing, holds the line (or brake assembly?), and has me pump the brakes until nothing but fluid comes out. It can take several pumps, and uses a bit of brake fluid, but it works well. (I've not seen what he's doing under there, since I'm inside the plane, but he's catching the fluid in a container of some sort.) They can't be bled from the bottom up? They can, but this is my A&P's method of preventing the OP's problem of eternally soft brakes. It apparently ensures that no air is left hiding anywhere in the system. I know, that's why you do it from the bottom up, no pumping the brakes required. My mechaninic rebuilt my left main strut this week and since that requires disassembly of the brake system on that side I helped him today bleed the brakes. Reason #6458 why Beech has the reputation they do for quality and good engineering and design. The reservoir is on the firewall, no having to wiggle over the front seats to wait for the fluid to come squirting out onto your carpet. |
#12
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Newps wrote:
: I know, that's why you do it from the bottom up, no pumping the brakes : required. My mechaninic rebuilt my left main strut this week and since : that requires disassembly of the brake system on that side I helped him : today bleed the brakes. Reason #6458 why Beech has the reputation they : do for quality and good engineering and design. The reservoir is on the : firewall, no having to wiggle over the front seats to wait for the fluid : to come squirting out onto your carpet. Not to argue since all I know is heresay at this point, but my mechanic had problems bleeding a guy's cherokee *even though* they were bleeding bottom-up. Top-down, bottom-up, it didn't seem to matter.... they couldn't get all the air out. Ended up having to replace some weird seal/gasket/valve thingy (don't know the specifics). Apparently it's a common thing to have to replace... maybe why all the FUD about bleeding Cherokee brakes. Perhaps it's only a PITA if this other thing is broken. Sounds like Jay doesn't have any trouble. -Cory -- ************************************************** *********************** * Cory Papenfuss * * Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student * * Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University * ************************************************** *********************** |
#13
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#14
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#15
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Mike Noel wrote:
: I think : the problem can develop because of corrosion caused by water absorbed by the : brake fluid over time. Aircraft brake fluid is hydraulic OIL, and does not absorb water in the same manner that automotive brake fluids do. -- Aaron C. |
#16
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Aaron Coolidge writes:
: the problem can develop because of corrosion caused by water absorbed by the : brake fluid over time. Aircraft brake fluid is hydraulic OIL, and does not absorb water in the same manner that automotive brake fluids do. Wow; I'm surprised.... I'd think oil would absorb air far too easily. That's SURE to cause spongy brakes... -- A host is a host from coast to & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433 |
#17
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![]() "David Lesher" wrote in message ... Aaron Coolidge writes: : the problem can develop because of corrosion caused by water absorbed by the : brake fluid over time. Aircraft brake fluid is hydraulic OIL, and does not absorb water in the same manner that automotive brake fluids do. Wow; I'm surprised.... I'd think oil would absorb air far too easily. That's SURE to cause spongy brakes... I've never seen or heard of oil absorbing air. |
#18
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"Dave Stadt" writes:
Wow; I'm surprised.... I'd think oil would absorb air far too easily. That's SURE to cause spongy brakes... I've never seen or heard of oil absorbing air. Well, overfill a crankcase and watch the oil get whipped into a froth, and rapidly lose its lubrication qualities... Automotive brake fluid was, ISTM, the very first federal automotive safety standard. It must have: High boiling point low air absorbation compatability with rubber lines and seals There were a few cars, but VERY few, that needed non-standard brake fluid. One was a friend's Hillman Minx (Mynx?) that Goodyear or Firestone or such had put DOT-3 in; every seal was gone. The other was the Citroen DS with master hydraulic pump that ran brakes, steering, suspension and transmission. It used exotic "green blood" and every owner carried a spare 10 litres or so...just in case... -- A host is a host from coast to & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433 |
#19
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![]() "David Lesher" wrote in message ... "Dave Stadt" writes: Wow; I'm surprised.... I'd think oil would absorb air far too easily. That's SURE to cause spongy brakes... I've never seen or heard of oil absorbing air. Well, overfill a crankcase and watch the oil get whipped into a froth, and rapidly lose its lubrication qualities... That's not exactly what could happen in a brake circuit. We are talking brake circuits not crankcase. Leave oil exposed to the atmosphere and it does not absorb air. Automotive brake fluid was, ISTM, the very first federal automotive safety standard. It must have: Traditional automotive brake fluid is alcohol based and is hydroscopic. A can will become useless in a matter of hours if not tightly capped. It is not oil based. High boiling point low air absorbation compatability with rubber lines and seals There were a few cars, but VERY few, that needed non-standard brake fluid. One was a friend's Hillman Minx (Mynx?) that Goodyear or Firestone or such had put DOT-3 in; every seal was gone. The other was the Citroen DS with master hydraulic pump that ran brakes, steering, suspension and transmission. It used exotic "green blood" and every owner carried a spare 10 litres or so...just in case... Anybody that drove or drives a Citroen needs more than 10 litres of green blood. A Priest, a tow truck and a credit card with no limit is a good place to start. -- A host is a host from coast to & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433 |
#20
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"Dave Stadt" writes:
That's not exactly what could happen in a brake circuit. We are talking brake circuits not crankcase. Leave oil exposed to the atmosphere and it does not absorb air. Nope, just water..... but in any case the key issue is having a fluid that has very low compressibility even at high temperatures. (Look at the NOVA series on the 777; the rejected-takeoff test has the solid carbon rotors glowiing bright orange as the rims melt...now THAT'S hot....). Even a small amount of suspended air makes it compressable. And oil, unlike brake fluid, does not err ?stratify? well. Automotive brake fluid was, ISTM, the very first federal automotive safety standard. It must have: Traditional automotive brake fluid is alcohol based and is hydroscopic. A can will become useless in a matter of hours if not tightly capped. It is not oil based. Ahem.. it's not alcohol-based; it's glycol based. (Except DOT-5 which is silicon..) High boiling point low air absorbation compatability with rubber lines and seals Anybody that drove or drives a Citroen needs more than 10 litres of green blood. A Priest, a tow truck and a credit card with no limit is a good place to start. Not at all; you merely need 2 tools: a cell phone and a pickup w/trailer. Just like any MG/Jag owner... -- A host is a host from coast to & no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433 is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433 |
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