I'm pulling fuse 23 tonight to kill the ABS. I want that pump/module unit acting as nothing but a manifold for a while to see what effect its having.
This is what I dont understand. There's a finite amount of fluid in the system once the pedal is pushed and the master passes the reservoir port. The pads can only move so far. If a good non-abs push of the brakes can haul you down from from 160kph and the pedal only goes halfway, how is that a crash stop with full abs at a slow speed will see the pedal go to the floor. Where's the fluid going? The brake pads didnt move further than the first instance. The fluid didnt fall on the ground. The master cylinder didnt suddenly blow a seal. To me there has to be some dynamic internal accumulator (picture a balloon expanding or contracting if a solenoid gives fluid a pathway there?) inside the abs module that might even be active all the time, not just in a full abs intervention. Or could it be that a bypass circuit is opened up in the module that actually pulls fluid from out in front of the master cylinder when the abs becomes active so that you cant add any additional force with your foot to the pre programmed abs routine thats being pressured by its pump. Dunno. Why else would the pedal literally become redundant in an ABS stop. I'm thinking they dont want you having any input at that stage to how the braking is performed. Where I'm going with all this is that it really could be some sort of active line pressure management thats governed by the ABS module, which is making our pedals feel so long, vague and variable. If its a dynamic system thats active all the time to varying degrees ie not just on when a full ABS stop happens, then that could be what is killing the pedal feel, because you are never actually feeling feedback through the pedal of the fluid pressure directly against the pads - its damped and tampered with through the module.
I've seen it written here and there that the pedal gets better immediately after a crash stop. Maybe after said accumulator or bypass circuit is utilised the system then evacuates it again which restores some pedal feel. Well that would be the right time to pull the ABS fuse in my opinion.
Simon does your daughters car have ABS? If you do a crash stop does the pedal head for the floor or stay up where it normally should be?
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