RangerDave
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- Bar Harbor, ME
The step by step airpack rebuilds I have noodled were very useful threads and I thank you all for the time to have done it! I rebuilt my Master Cylinder and Air Pack last year and much to my chagrin, the remote brake fluid reservoir started lowering and the brakes started fading.... only a 100 miles or so on the truck and only warming it up and "exercising" the brakes from time to time as it sits... So, I pulled it and rebuilt it - again -thinking I flipped a seal or something, but I found that was not the case...
So, the burning question that I have, "where does all of the crap in the air lines come from and how can I prevent more crap from getting into the airpack to ruin my seals and corroding the surfaces????"
Because when I opened it up, I was horrified at the amount of rust and gunk from the water migration into the air pack - not to mention the pitting from water sitting in some of the chambers... The two worst places (chambers) were where the "J" tube enters the rear of the airpack and the small stainless? piston with the two gaskets (brake fluid side that pushes against the larger brass piston that controls the air valving).
Two possibly significant notes about what I did...
1. I failed to blow out the air lines leading to and away from the airpack - my bad
2. I flushed the old dot 5 out with denatured alcohol as some had recommended doing and then purged that out with new dot 5... - is it possible that some of that denatured alcohol could have pooled around the airpack seal where the stainless double piston cup is, because it didn't get properly flushed out and collecting water and causing those seals to fail? I was just flabbergasted at how much corrosion had happened from last year and virtually no use...
I also have an alcohol evaporator plumbed into the side of the air compressor to help with the water problems...
PS: Although I am not against doing the work to search for all of the forum posts and notes about "how to fix" my stuff, searching for those helpful threads and finding what you need can be an onerous task if you are starting from scratch. I have looked and read for days at a time, only to have someone else finally ask the same question and then get flamed for "not knowing how to search". So, I am timid about being that "one" when posting.... Maybe it already exists and it is my "inadequacy" of not being able to search the forum using the "right" words, but I think it would be helpful (especially as the forum threads grow with membership and knowledge) to have up in the sticky, specific sections that seem to get a lot of views (because of need). In stead of having one person post a "how to" in the sticky with 9 pages of "thank yous" - A "how to" that has links in it to as many threads in the forum to link all of the same info together. Like having a sticky on "Brake System Airpack" as a general topic for instance, and have a real good step by step rebuild and having as many of the links the other 18 threads that contain critical information for its care, maintenance and other oddities that you might come across in overhauling, trouble shooting, or field repairing posted inside the sticky thread by members who have either posted the info or found the info from other members. Close up pictures that are not blurry would be great too. So instead of the pages and pages of thank yous with a post here and there with any helpful information, only a summary post of what you will find once you click the link in the thread... I have seen this in threads where someone has a question and then gets flamed, only to have someone else "find" said posts and then give those links to the person searching for the info and problem solved... I have almost done this several times to help preempt the forum search blues, but didn't want to step on anyones toes. End Rant.
Thanks Again for all your comments - I put on my welding gloves, so flame away!!!
So, the burning question that I have, "where does all of the crap in the air lines come from and how can I prevent more crap from getting into the airpack to ruin my seals and corroding the surfaces????"
Because when I opened it up, I was horrified at the amount of rust and gunk from the water migration into the air pack - not to mention the pitting from water sitting in some of the chambers... The two worst places (chambers) were where the "J" tube enters the rear of the airpack and the small stainless? piston with the two gaskets (brake fluid side that pushes against the larger brass piston that controls the air valving).
Two possibly significant notes about what I did...
1. I failed to blow out the air lines leading to and away from the airpack - my bad
2. I flushed the old dot 5 out with denatured alcohol as some had recommended doing and then purged that out with new dot 5... - is it possible that some of that denatured alcohol could have pooled around the airpack seal where the stainless double piston cup is, because it didn't get properly flushed out and collecting water and causing those seals to fail? I was just flabbergasted at how much corrosion had happened from last year and virtually no use...
I also have an alcohol evaporator plumbed into the side of the air compressor to help with the water problems...
PS: Although I am not against doing the work to search for all of the forum posts and notes about "how to fix" my stuff, searching for those helpful threads and finding what you need can be an onerous task if you are starting from scratch. I have looked and read for days at a time, only to have someone else finally ask the same question and then get flamed for "not knowing how to search". So, I am timid about being that "one" when posting.... Maybe it already exists and it is my "inadequacy" of not being able to search the forum using the "right" words, but I think it would be helpful (especially as the forum threads grow with membership and knowledge) to have up in the sticky, specific sections that seem to get a lot of views (because of need). In stead of having one person post a "how to" in the sticky with 9 pages of "thank yous" - A "how to" that has links in it to as many threads in the forum to link all of the same info together. Like having a sticky on "Brake System Airpack" as a general topic for instance, and have a real good step by step rebuild and having as many of the links the other 18 threads that contain critical information for its care, maintenance and other oddities that you might come across in overhauling, trouble shooting, or field repairing posted inside the sticky thread by members who have either posted the info or found the info from other members. Close up pictures that are not blurry would be great too. So instead of the pages and pages of thank yous with a post here and there with any helpful information, only a summary post of what you will find once you click the link in the thread... I have seen this in threads where someone has a question and then gets flamed, only to have someone else "find" said posts and then give those links to the person searching for the info and problem solved... I have almost done this several times to help preempt the forum search blues, but didn't want to step on anyones toes. End Rant.
Thanks Again for all your comments - I put on my welding gloves, so flame away!!!
