Stop me if I've posted in the wrong location. I'm at a complete loss when it comes to the brakes on my RX7. I apologize for the novel. I like details when problem-solving so I try to lay everything out.
TL/DR:
I refreshed the entire brake system: new master cylinder and hoses, cleaned and painted booster and cleaned proportioning valve. Now I have no brakes despite being confident there's no air in the system. I'm stuck.
Long version:
This is somewhat embarassing because automotive braking systems and their maintenance is something I thought I understood fairly well. Over the Summer I've been refreshing my '79 RX7. It's over 42 years old and as far as I can tell most everything is original and that includes all the rubber bits. I'm getting around to correcting that starting with the most import things: coolant hoses, fuel lines, clutch and brake hydraulics, etc. New clutch master and slave cylinders and rubber line went in without a hitch. Last weekened I decided to tackle the brakes. Friday night I swapped the three rubber lines and bench bled the new master cylinder. All Centric aftermarket parts. I also adjusted the shoes in the rear so the drums were *just* able to move freely. Saturday I went about removing the old MC only to be greeted with a brake booster that looked like this:
To be clear, I found no evidence of the MC leaking but the service records from the previous owner indicate it was replaced back in '88 so perhaps this is leftover from that. Since I was in there I decided to freshen up the booster. A few hours with degreaser, sandpaper and some VHT epoxy paint and I have this:
Waited a day for the paint to cure then installed everything on Sunday. Looks clean(er):
I then initiated the bleeding process. I have a Motive pressure bleeder that has made work on my other cars ('86 RX7, '10 Jetta, etc.) almost comically easy. Hooked up everything, pumped the system to 15 psi and bled everything. The RX7 is a little weird in that there's only one rear bleeder in the rear on the RR wheel cylinder and there's also a bleeder on the MC itself. I bled RR, FL, FR and then finally at the MC again. Even after using the Motive tool I still had my oldest help me with the old-fashioned way: pump pedal, hold pedal, crack bleeder, wait a second or two, close bleeder before fluid stops then release pedal. Did this in the same order as before. I like to do this when I've replaced components (e.g. MC, calipers) because it generates significantly more pressure than the Motive tool.
Confident in a job well done I bolted the wheels back up, torqued them to spec, lowered the car and got ready for the post-job test drive. Brake pedal felt fine - as good as a 42 year-old car with drum brakes can feel. Here's where the problem starts. I fire up the engine and the pedal goes straight down. Pumping does nothing. To be clear, the pedal isn't going all the way to the floor. It eventually hits some limit. Be it the end of the cylinder of the MC or I finally get hydraulic pressure, I'm not sure. At this point the wheels are locked and cannot be turned by hand. However, I don't feel the car is safe to drive so back up in the air it goes. I spent the rest of Sunday afternoon looking for leaks, buldges, stuck pistons/shoes, you name it. I bled the brakes again yet I'm left with the same result. It's now getting late, I'm beat so I admit defeat and call it a day.
My first thought is maybe I got a bad "new" MC. I understand most of these are actually rebuilds and sometimes you get unlucky. I've had bad rebuilt calipers and MCs before. I decided to order another MC using the OEM PN from a reputable rotary parts dealer at a premium price point. I also ordered some new brake fittings so I can ensure I've bled the MC properly. I've got some cutup pieces of old brake hard line I use to attach the tubes for the bleeding process. The problem is this car's fittings are M10x1.25 whereas all the fittings I had were M10x1.0. I also ordered some M10x1.25 to -3AN adapters and some -3AN plugs so I could verify the MC was bled and confirm a hard pedal once installed on the car. Since I ordered another MC I decided to tear down the two I had and look for differences. At first glance the only noticeable difference was the resvoirs:
The new MC has the cap in the middle and the front and rear sections appear to be the same volume. The old one has the cap nearer the rear and there's more volume in the front section of the resevoir. Other than that, externally, they are the same. Number of ports, port locations and external dimensions are the same. Once I started the disassembly process I noticed a couple more differences:
The first is the primary piston retention method. The new MC uses a simple circlip whereas the old has a metal washer and a wierd triangular spring clip. As far as I can tell they both seat the same depth in the bore. The other obvious difference is the old MC pistons are clearly cast aluminum while the new one's are machined Al. Bore and piston diameter, piston length, spring free length, etc. are all within manufacturing tolerances of eachother.
Now I'm thinking the MC is not likely at fault but I'll still wait for the "OEM" one to come in. The other major component I touched was the booster. I know when these fail it usually results in a hard pedal, not soft. Regardless, I start looking for obvious faults. The booster holds 20 in. Hg vacuum just fine. The pedal definitely sinks when the engine is started. Pumping the pedal after the engine is shut off gradually results in a firmer pedal once the internal vacuum is released. I did find one thing. The OEM spec for booster pushrod-to-MC clearance is 0.1-0.5 mm. Mine was like 5 mm and confirmed with both MCs. That seems odd considering this would be a pretty big miss at assembly and no one should have touched this since. This could certainly account for some of my excess pedal travel. I get the pushrod clearance set as well as check and set the pedal height and freeplay to OEM specs. Over the week parts start to trickle in.
By early afternoon Saturday everything has arrived. The new, new MC looks identical to the old, new MC except it came with another fluid level sensor. I bench bleed the MC. First without the proportioning valve then again with it installed. With all the ports plugged I get less than 1/8" piston movement on the bench. I installed the MC on the car and with the ports still plugged I get maybe 1/2" pedal movement after the pushrod engages the MC. I attribute this to mechanical advantage of the pedal. Next, I start the bleeding process. I use my Motive pressure bleeder again but this time I bleed connect and bleed each circuit one-by-one. First I connect the rear circuit, bleed it, then I connect the FR circuit, bleed it and so on. Once I'm done with the Motive tool I do it the old-fashioned way again, but with a twist. The Factory service manual gives a slight variation: open bleeder, depress pedal all the way, allow pedal to return to full height, then close the bleeder. Repeat until bubbles are gone. I do this RR, FR, FL and MC. Hop in the car and the pedal feels better, but that might just be due to the reduction in pushrod clearance. Put the wheels back on, lower the car, fire it up AND THE PEDAL GOES TO THE FLOOR AGAIN! Against better judgement I take the car for a quick spin and it's as bad as you would expect. Essentially no brakes. However, if I stomp on the pedal hard/fast enough something does lock up. Felt like the rear. Back at home I plugged the ports on the MC again and confirmed I still had ~1/2" of pedal travel. However, when the engine running that 1/2" has no resistance.
So this is where I am. I've used two different "new" MCs. I've bled everything more times than I can count with three different methods. There are no leaks. There are no bulging brake lines. Rear shoes are adjusted probably tighter than they should be. I even replaced the RL wheel cylinder because the shoes were moving unevenly and I had a spare on hand. As far as I can tell everything is in spec. Here's a list of everything I've touched/adjusted:
1. Replaced rubber brake hoses at rear and FL and FR connections with aftermarket Centric parts. No leaks from connections and no bulging with the pedal depressed.
2. Replaced MC twice, once with Centric part and again with "OEM" part. Bench bled both times. Piston moves ~1/8" with ports blocked on bench. No leaks at connections.
3. Removed, cleaned and painted the brake booster. Holds up to 20 in. Hg vacuum. Adjusted pushrod-to-MC clearnace to ~0.5 mm. Pedal goes soft when car is started goes hard again after a few pumps with engine off.
4. Removed and cleaned the brake proportioning valve. No leaks at connections.
5. Adjusted rear brake shoes to *just* drag on the drums.
6. Replaced RL wheel cylinder. No leaks at connections.
7. Adjusted brake pedal height and free play to OEM specs.
I'm at the point now where I'm going to start going back and putting the old parts back on. I've already disassembled, cleaned and reassembled the old MC. The next step is to bench bleed and install that and try again. If that doesn't work that pretty much leaves the brake booster or proportioning valve. Maybe I damaged something during the cleaning process. I'm trying to track down some used parts to test. Lines are lines to me so unless there's visible leaking or buldging I assume their doing their job.
Sorry for the novel. So what should have been a simple, straightforward job on an old car has turned complicated. I'm completely stumped.