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I had the car in at a shop today for some service / repairs. Actually a really good buy, for $269.xx I got 3 things done which eliminated the need for me spend hours to jack the car up, get on my back, go get parts, probably buy a tool or two, swear at the cat, break something, and -- give up and finish the next weekend.
One thing I had the brake fluid flushed, and the owner suggested the brake master cylinder may be getting weak -- there was no significant evidence, just a suggestion. It might have been an upsell, I have no big problem with that, some owners might say great idea let's replace it as preventative. But I figured I'd give it some time first.
Anybody have an idea on the failure rate of brake masters on our cars? Any experiences? I am sure they will wear, but how many miles do you think we have?
Thank you!
Roland
Roland
'93 Coupe Tip Silver on Grey, '02 911 C4S, '89 Vanagon Syncro -- (RIP: 944, 911SC, 931, MGB, VW Bug, GTO, Sprite.)
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I had the Clutch hose replaced with the S/S line. Shortly thereafter the Master and slave gave way so they were both replaced. I would not be surprised to find that they fail without the S/S lines as well.
Jay
“Faster, Faster, until the thrill of speed overcomes the fear of death.” - Hunter S. Thompson
"I couldn't find the sports car of my dreams, so I built it myself." ~Dr. Ferdinand Porsche
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I re-read my original post, I did not mean to imply that the S/S line caused the failure, only that the pressure through that system is fairly high.
Jay
“Faster, Faster, until the thrill of speed overcomes the fear of death.” - Hunter S. Thompson
"I couldn't find the sports car of my dreams, so I built it myself." ~Dr. Ferdinand Porsche
"968Forums, a quaint little drinking community with a serious horsepower problem"
"Life's journey is not to arrive at the grave safely in a well-preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, totally worn-out, shouting, 'Holy sh*t! What a ride!'"- Unknown
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Especially on older cars, where some silt may have built up on the inside of the cylinder, it is easy to cause the master cylinder to fail. The old technique of pumping the brake pedal while opening the bleader causes the piston to travel over parts of the cylinder that normally sees no seal wiping. This can easily cause the seal to fail. It is not a guarantee, but I've seen it happen right after someone bleeding the brakes. Just one more reason to use a pressure bleeder.
'92 Midnight Blue 968 Coupe
'94 ProbeGT, Eaton SC@9psi, Quaife, TecGT ECU, 300+HP, body sold, parting out
'98 3000GT VR-4, 400+HP AWD beast, didn't fit w/race helmet, Sold
'93 Bone Stock MX-6 Sold (in '05) sadly to the crusher in 2010
'61 Triumph TR-3, White with red leather interior; My First Car
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Bleeding the clutch is complete PITA, with or without the pressure bleeder. Enlist someone to pump the clutch while you're bleeding the line. (That was my job at RSB).
Jay
“Faster, Faster, until the thrill of speed overcomes the fear of death.” - Hunter S. Thompson
"I couldn't find the sports car of my dreams, so I built it myself." ~Dr. Ferdinand Porsche
"968Forums, a quaint little drinking community with a serious horsepower problem"
"Life's journey is not to arrive at the grave safely in a well-preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, totally worn-out, shouting, 'Holy sh*t! What a ride!'"- Unknown
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I'm with Jay, mine was a b to get bled. I even raised the rear of the car, never let it run dry, put fluid in the bleeder tank, etc., etc. In spite of all this it took a lot of time and running a lot of fluid through before it was properly bled and I had a functional clutch. Never spent that much time/effort bleeding anything.
'92 Midnight Blue 968 Coupe
'94 ProbeGT, Eaton SC@9psi, Quaife, TecGT ECU, 300+HP, body sold, parting out
'98 3000GT VR-4, 400+HP AWD beast, didn't fit w/race helmet, Sold
'93 Bone Stock MX-6 Sold (in '05) sadly to the crusher in 2010
'61 Triumph TR-3, White with red leather interior; My First Car
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Back to the original topic...
I have seen a number of brake master cylinders fail on these cars, but not really on street cars. On a car driven on the track the pressure will build up with the heat and you'll get the reservoir overflowing slightly. Seen it a few times, and have had it myself twice on two different 944 variants.
Joel Wahlsten
93 968 Amazon Green w/LSD and a few mods
2017 Cayenne GTS Mahogany Metallic