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Mixed silicone and mineral brake fluid together by accident

PostPosted: Fri Jul 08, 2005 10:05 pm
by berni29
Hi

I have just bought (another) +2. On the test drive there was an illuminated red light on the dashboard with "fail" next to it. Before driving home I checked the brake fluid, and sure enough, there was hardly any in the cylinder. So I filled it with mineral DOT 4. It turns out that the car had silicone fluid in it, and had had for 18 months. The leak was found (braided hose) and fixed. I have bled more mineral fluid through the system but cannot get a hard pedal. During the hose change the master cylinder ran dry.

I am wondering if my helper was not pusing the pedal down fast enough to get the air out. Is that possible?

Any suggestions appreciated.

Berni

Re: Mixed silicone and mineral brake fluid together by accident

PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2005 1:53 am
by 1964 S1
Hello Berni, how many +2's? I too have a soft pedal in my '69 but still very driveable. A leak on a braided hose? At the end of the hose? We've got to stop your inventory growth and get you on the road ! Which hose was leaking... You found a Lotus with an illuminating "FAIL" light? Disconnect it !
Helper pushing fast enough? You need a slow pusher with slow deliberate pushes to the floor and holding the pedal down... How many plus twos do you have? ...

Re: Mixed silicone and mineral brake fluid together by accident

PostPosted: Sat Jul 09, 2005 3:08 pm
by type26owner
Berni,
The DOT4 stuff I think is a glycol based fluid. It should be densier then the silicone and it's okay to flush the system in this direction. The silicone should float to the top and since the bleed screws on the calipers are also at the top the silicone will get flushed out. The silicone fliud is great stuff as long as you never get it really hot. The stuff becomes extremely compressible then and even though there is no air in the system it's quite possible to push the brake pedal all the way to the floor and have no brakes at ALL.

If the clutch has been filled with the silicone fluid you're in trouble and don't know it yet. Apparently the seal in the slave cylinder is a silicone one. Silicone fluid is the only solvent for the silicone seals and it will attack it slowly. After about a year the slave cylinder will fail due to the seal turning into the consistancy of chewing gum.

Go buy a set of one-way check valve bleeders for the calipers and the clutch slave cylinder for a few quid. You can do the bleeding by yourself then. Only downside with that method is you can't see the bubbles coming out of the bleed tube.

Re: Mixed silicone and mineral brake fluid together by accident

PostPosted: Sun Jul 10, 2005 1:09 pm
by Rob_LaMoreaux
You may have gotten some air into the master cylinder and that is why the pedal doesn't want to go hard. Probably the best way to deal with this would be to use a power bleeder like the ones that look like a garden sprayer reservoir/pump chamber.

Otherwise you may need to bench bleed the reservoir to get the air out of the master cylinder.

I'd probably go with the power bleeder method so I was sure to get a lot of new fluid through to clean out the silicon.[/quote]

Re: Mixed silicone and mineral brake fluid together by accident

PostPosted: Mon Jul 11, 2005 1:42 am
by type36lotus
What Keith say is goodness. I installed these on my brakes and clutch. Makes life so easy. I now change my brake and clutch fluid annually, instead of almost never. The brand I bought were called Speed Bleeders. I used SB3824 3/8 - 24 the long ones for the brakes, I think the clutch was the same except you can use the short ones there.

Re: Mixed silicone and mineral brake fluid together by accident

PostPosted: Mon Jul 11, 2005 3:49 am
by berni29
Many thanks for the replies.

I have looked the up Speed Bleeders and they look really good. I will get a set of those. I did bleed the brakes again this weekend and have a pretty good pedal now. I think that I am OK with the clutch because the fluid looks a bit gungy. I will be bleeding that next.

The reason that I have so many plus 2 bits is that I crashed my original one, but shortly before that had bought a complete (26,000 mile but derelict) one with the intention of restoring it, then I learnt about painting fibreglass and couldn't face it, then I saw a JPS that needed a chassis, halfway through that I saw this green plus 2 that had been rebuilt and that I could drive straight away. Plus in the middle I bought a galvanised (complete) rolling chassis. Now I have to do something about it all. I love driving a plus 2 again though.

I have already sold the excess engines, except for the JPS, which is complete.

All the best

Re: Mixed silicone and mineral brake fluid together by accident

PostPosted: Wed Jul 13, 2005 8:16 pm
by carrierdave
Hi Berni,
I too have the rather strange cork float device in my master cylinder ? I think I have got it too work but generally I just ignore it if it comes on.
When I changed my master cylinder I had problems with bleeding the system, I would get all of the air out of the calipers but still had a soft peddle. I think I then read a posting that Keith commented in ? It spoke about bench bleeding of the master cylinder. It also went on to talk about sticking a large heavy weight on the brake pedal over night.

This basically applied continuous pressure to the master cylinder in the hope that the air bubbles would get squeezed out. The first time I tried it I was amazed at the results. I also find that you need to push the pedal down slowly, you get a far better bleed off from the caliper.

Dave

PS. I must give you a call about those wheels.

Re: Mixed silicone and mineral brake fluid together by accident

PostPosted: Thu Jul 14, 2005 11:05 am
by Si_130/5
"I also find that you need to push the pedal down slowly, you get a far better bleed off from the calliper."


Thanks carrierdave and 1964 S1 for your vindication,

Simon (berni29's slow pushing bleeder) :)

Mixed Fluids

PostPosted: Tue Jan 17, 2006 10:14 pm
by DJThom
When you get a chance, I would suggest taking your calipers apart, cleaning everything and putting them back together with the fluid of your choice.

Several years ago, my dad flushed his XKE brakes with silicone. As one of the above posts indicates, the silicone fluid floats. The result is some mineral fluid sitting at the bottom of your calipers that never gets flushed out and that collects moisture. The result several years later: new pistons and slieves all round.

Silicon & Mineral

PostPosted: Tue Jan 17, 2006 10:58 pm
by Dave-M
"Go buy a set of one-way check valve bleeders for the calipers and the clutch slave cylinder for a few quid."
Kieth, Is aCalifornian Quid the same as a British Quid?
The new mellow Kieth is more suited to the British temprement and I look forward to the next Weber posting
Regards
Dave

.

PostPosted: Wed Jan 18, 2006 11:55 pm
by elansprint71
........dismantle the car, sell the parts on eBay, double your investment, buy a two seater!

You may have to do this twice to get into the Elan +0 market at the moment, though. :P

Pete.

Re: Mixed silicone and mineral brake fluid together by accident

PostPosted: Thu Jan 19, 2006 4:04 am
by bengalcharlie
Why would you do that Pete?
the plus two is a very underrated but fantastic sports car and in my opinion a more balanced a prettier car than the baby elan and cheaper so plusses all around!

cheers

Robin

PS One day they may be even rarer than the baby elan due to people wrecking these beauties for parts!
up goes the value!