Dave Forster
Supporter
This may be a dumb question, but I'm having trouble bleeding the brakes.
The car has the stock Tilton Series 600 pedal set that came with the kit. Using a pressure bleeder combined with the traditional pedal pumping and nipple valve cycling, we got the pedal rock hard (yaay!), but by the time the car had rolled out to the driveway, it was feeling soft again and by the time I got to the end of the street, it required pumping to come to a stop.
Yes, this means the car is now officially at the go-kart stage (another yaay!)
We tried bleeding again using the same method and didn't see any air bubbles, but once again after the bleeding process, the pedal felt hard and then a short while later, felt soft again.
At no time could we find any brake fluid dripping from any of the brake line connections or under the master cylinders.
I'm wondering if this means I have bad seals in the Tilton master cylinders? What do you guys think?
The car has the stock Tilton Series 600 pedal set that came with the kit. Using a pressure bleeder combined with the traditional pedal pumping and nipple valve cycling, we got the pedal rock hard (yaay!), but by the time the car had rolled out to the driveway, it was feeling soft again and by the time I got to the end of the street, it required pumping to come to a stop.
Yes, this means the car is now officially at the go-kart stage (another yaay!)
We tried bleeding again using the same method and didn't see any air bubbles, but once again after the bleeding process, the pedal felt hard and then a short while later, felt soft again.
At no time could we find any brake fluid dripping from any of the brake line connections or under the master cylinders.
I'm wondering if this means I have bad seals in the Tilton master cylinders? What do you guys think?