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Front brakes stuck after fitting new pads

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by harryarcos, Feb 18, 2017.

  1. harryarcos

    harryarcos Junior Member

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    Thanks for the pointer. Having already removed the blue relays and pumped the brakes, I only had to open up the bleed nipples (as above) to see that the fluid was under very little pressure. Nonetheless, the calipers remained firmly against the discs to the extent that they would only move when a lever was put over the studs. I pumped the brake pedal to drain half a cupful of brake fluid on each side and it was as clear as that in a new pack. If there was any break up of the hoses, I would have expected at least a few specs of black material from the inside of the hoses. I have ordered a couple of cylinder repair kits in the hope that the actual cylinders are still in good condition.

    Surprised that the cylinders should need an overhaul at such a low mileage and when at least one side was working 100% before the pads were changed, but perhaps that is the result of the brakes not being used very much?

    I will let you know how I get on.
     
  2. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Interesting ... that sounds like actual binding, not just lazy return from the seals. We'll know more when you get them apart.

    There was another PriusChat poster in the last year or so (as I recall) who was surprised to find the phenolic piston had swollen and become a tight fit. Surprised because that's not expected to happen; the manufacturers have worked hard at phenolic resins that don't do that. If I remember right, he had a long steep hill on his commute and thought unusual heat might have had something to do with it. New pistons fixed it for him. They're not expensive, but have to be ordered separately if you need them; the rubber kit doesn't include them.

    By the way, if they are tightly binding and hard to remove, it's best to use fluid pressure to push them out (and give them something soft to push into)—they can be cracked if shot out against a hard surface, as compressed air might.

    -Chap
     
  3. 05PreeUs

    05PreeUs Senior Member

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    Miles are nearly meaningless for calipers and caliper pistons, most likely moisture got behind the boots and once the pistons were pressed back in, they now bind in the caliper bore(s) due to rust. Definitely would not discount hardened caliper piston seals as 13 years old, but they come in the kits.
     
  4. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Can you get rebuilt calipers easily? The simplest route?
     
  5. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    You can walk into any of the {Auto Zone, Pep Boys, Murray's, Advance, ...} sorts of stores and they will sell you something purporting to be a compatible rebuilt caliper on the spot. In my earlier years, I did consider that easiest, and did it routinely. In many cases, the caliper body itself will be a genuine OEM casting from a caliper that got replaced with one of these remans, then found itself going back as a core return to the same remanufacturer.

    It was my experience a couple years ago that changed my thinking on that ... I had a 14-year-old original Toyota caliper that had gotten sticky because of a nick in the rubber boot, and I wanted easy, so I bought a parts-store-special rebuild and slapped it on. It had obviously been a real Toyota caliper once, though it now had obviously different piston and other hardware, and a different finish that they called "exclusive rustproof", which meant it was turning to red powder by a month after I put it on. The remanufacturing process had involved bead-blasting it within inches of its life (even the originally flat machined mounting surfaces were now blast textured), and, oh yes, right out of the box it had zero piston return.

    That was when I discovered Toyota itself offers certain parts as reman (check for the part number with -84 suffix, they were available for my Gen 1 anyway). It was about twice the price of the cheapo one, and the quality of remanufacturing was unmistakably like night and day. The machined places were still flat, it was refinished to Toyota spec and did not start rusting right away, and the piston and all hardware and grease were as Toyota spec'd (which also means it would be rebuildable in the future using Toyota rebuild kits).

    The best part was, I discovered that before I had returned my original caliper for the core refund from the cheapo purchase. I just let the third-party rebuilder keep my core charge, and sent my original Toyota caliper back to T so it could be well remanufactured instead of sloppily.

    Nowadays I just keep on hand one rubber kit each for front and rear, and figure I'll do quick caliper checks when I rotate tires, I ought to catch any problem in time to easily rebuild on the spot if need be and be done with it, even if the stores are closed.

    My most recent check showed flying colors for everything, except I changed out the fitting kit on the rears because they were binding some. A little bit of attention once/twice a year seems to be enough to keep everything in top shape.

    -Chap
     
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  6. harryarcos

    harryarcos Junior Member

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    My first thought when I saw the difference in pad wear was a sticking piston on the NS and I got as far as measuring the diameter of the piston to confirm that it was Advic rather than Aisin - which the supplier said had been fitted on most MY15 cars. Pleased to say that the piston was in very good condition and made of steel, but it was when I found that the OS had also seized up and warning lights appeared, that it looked like something more serious had gone wrong. Parts should be with me tomorrow, so should know within a few days, one way or the other.
     
  7. 05PreeUs

    05PreeUs Senior Member

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    You can, but it is simple as a DIY project and about $10/caliper to do. At least you know what you have that way.
     
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  8. harryarcos

    harryarcos Junior Member

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    We live and learn and I am certainly learning on this Prius. Pleased that I did not take any bets on the pistons, because as ChapmanF suggested, they are indeed made of something which is not steel. Tempted to say that they are rubbish and not 'fit for purpose'. Having taken one piston out, I could not even get it back into the caliper housing with the seal removed - which was in very good condition. The piston seems to be slightly oval. New pistons on order.

    This vehicle has had a very easy life, mainly in and around London since new. It has never been driven 'hard' and has covered less than 50,000 miles. Compare that to the several Saabs which I have owned, all of which had over 100K on the clock when I changed them and been up and down Swiss mountains several times, it does not come out well.

    Of course, the car is built for congested cities and not to go up and down mountains, but there is nothing to stop you owning one if you live 6,000 feet above sea level and work as a diver!
     
  9. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Yeah this is the first car I've seen with plastic caliper pistons in the front. You need to be careful pushing them back, no point-loading, have uniform contact around the rim: someone here managed to crack one IIRC.

    If you cannot put a piston back in without seal, that could be very well be the core issue.
     
  10. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Prius went from cast-iron front calipers with steel pistons to aluminum with phenolic pistons between Gen 1 and Gen 2 in 2004 (2004 New Car Features Manual, page CH-31).

    Phenolic caliper pistons aren't especially rare on modern cars; it's easy to find articles about them. They're lighter, they don't rust, and they are less heat-conductive, which means less heat carried back into the brake fluid.

    There are articles that do refer to swelling as a possible issue with phenolics. I remember seeing one saying the problem was worse with the earliest phenolic pistons (many years ago now), and the manufacturers have worked successfully on solving it.

    I have to say yours is only the second case I've read on PriusChat of the piston swelling. It would be interesting to try to figure out what operating conditions seem to make it more likely.

    Here's one article studying the issue (starting from an observation that calipers of the same type, with phenolic pistons, used in delivery trucks, RVs, wreckers, etc., were having swelling problems in the RVs but not the other vehicles).
    https://static.nhtsa.gov/odi/inv/2007/INRP-EA07016-35282.pdf

    -Chap
     
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  11. harryarcos

    harryarcos Junior Member

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    Yes, I read on the manufacturer's website that these were introduced to lessen the heat transfer from the discs to the brake fluid, which is rather amusing as clearly it was the heat that caused the swelling. One side was working perfectly before the new pads were fitted, but it was obvious that the brakes were binding as soon as I drove the car. I travelled no more than half a mile and the discs reached 180ºC on one side and around 100ºC on the other. I then put the old pads back and took it for a much shorter ride, when the discs reached high temperatures and after clearing all the warning lights, tried it again with the same result. I believe that it was heat that caused the swelling rather than moisture and with brake fluid having a boiling point in excess of 250ºC I would prefer steel.
     
  12. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Did you happen to look at the NHTSA study linked above? I thought it was interesting that they didn't even write a 'conclusions' section at the end, but maybe you don't have to when the box plots are that dramatic.

    A couple telltale points: in the group of pistons whose diameters increased the most ... so did their weights.

    Also, in the group whose environmental chamber lost humidity toward the end of the test because of a gasket leak, the diameters and weights decreased toward the end.

    Also intriguing was the question that teed off the whole study: why the swelling in RVs but not delivery trucks? Delivery trucks carry heavy loads and stop a lot; their brakes presumably get hot.

    -Chap
     
  13. andrewclaus

    andrewclaus Active Member

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    Maybe it's the difference in training and professionalism of the drivers. Also, some trucks have drive line retarders and engine compression (Jacobs) brakes.

    Some of the trucks I drove had electro-magnetic retarders, so the "B" function on the Prius just seems natural. I keep trying to shift it into other retarder positions.
     
  14. valde3

    valde3 Senior Member

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    Way more likely just because of use the brakes including the brake caliber piston get hot and evaporate the moisture. RVs sit long time without use compared to delivery trucks that are used all the time.

    In the case of Harryarcos Prius it’s way more likely that swelling was there before but it only really became a problem after the piston was moved back. It getting stuck because it was swollen caused brake to heat up.
     
  15. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Regular brake fluid changes would help then?

    Toyota Canada is saying 3 years or 48,000 kms (30,000 miles).
     
  16. valde3

    valde3 Senior Member

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    Maybe, maybe not. Less than half of the piston surface is in contact with brake fluid. Other area is just in the atmospheric air. Some of the area is other area is under dust boot but that isn’t really air tight.

    Toyota Finland says to replace brake fluid every other year on all of their cars. Actually basically every importer here tells to replace the brake fluid every other year.
     
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  17. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Maybe your country's regulations? Here I know Honda Canada also: they say tri-yearly, regardless of mileage.
     
  18. valde3

    valde3 Senior Member

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    No it’s not a regulation as there are some cars that say to replace it every 4 years. And many where you first replace it after 3 years.
     
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  19. harryarcos

    harryarcos Junior Member

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    Thanks for your interest. I did glance at the NHTSA study, but to be honest, I am more interested in getting the car back on the road than as to why the pistons increased in size. If it was up to me, I would make these and many other parts in stainless steel and leave plastic for making kid's toys. I really do not think that it is anything to do with changing the brake fluid, which has been done every two years by Toyota.

    Back to the problem. New pistons delivered today and they do not fit! They are metal - not S/S but measure 54mm +or- 0.05mm in diameter. The bore in the caliper also measures 54mm +or- 0.05mm and I would think that there should be at least a 1 mm difference in order for the seal to do it's job properly and return the piston (See ChapmanF's post/link regarding the function of the seal). Not only that, but any heat would expand the piston and if there was no clearance, it would sick in the bore. Nonetheless, I foolishly tried to install the piston with a new seal, only for it to become jammed about 10mm into the bore. It took some time and 150 psi of air pressure to remove it. The seal was damaged.

    I learnt a long time ago to only use OEM on any important spare part, but could not find a Toyota part and thought the metal one a better bet - back to the drawing board.
     
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  20. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Good to know, thanks.

    Will Toyota sell you a rebuilt caliper? At this juncture it might be most expedient, albeit more expensive.
     
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