Sponsored

Another 2.3 brakes issue thread: it's a real problem this time

JohnHunter

Badlands
Member
First Name
John
Joined
Apr 19, 2022
Threads
2
Messages
17
Reaction score
4
Location
Washington
Vehicle(s)
Tacoma
Your Bronco Model
Badlands
TLDR: Vehicle is losing brake pressure when steering wheel is turned to the extreme and coming to a stop.

2.3 Badlands SAS. A few weeks back I began noticing occasional loss of brake pressure when moving at slow speeds, and particularly when parallel parking. The brake pedal loses most of its pressure and reaches all the way to the floor. aka spongy brakes.

I brought the Bronco to the dealership service to have a look at the brake system. They could not reproduce the problem, but bled the brake lines anyway for good measure. Unfortunately bleeding the brakes didn't help and the problem persists.

It took me a few days of trial and error, but I can now reliably reproduce the problem. I've narrowed it down to the brakes losing pressure when the steering wheel is turned to it's extreme (e.g. when parallel parking.)

Steps to reproduce:
1. Pull up next to the car in front of the spot I intend to pull into.
2. Put the car in reverse and cut the wheel all the way.
3. Begin pulling into the spot.
4. Get the ass end into the spot and cut the wheel all the way in the opposite direction.
5. Apply brake. Brakes lose pressure and I need to sink the brake pedal all the way to the floor to bring the car to a complete stop.

Has anyone experienced this problem before? Is there anyone mechanically inclined who can weigh in on the problem? Ideally it would be great if there is a Ford engineer on the board who can provide some insight.
Sponsored

 
Last edited:

mj63

Big Bend
Well-Known Member
First Name
Matt
Joined
Apr 20, 2022
Threads
1
Messages
84
Reaction score
111
Location
Toledo
Vehicle(s)
Bronco
Your Bronco Model
Big Bend
Clubs
 
Just out of curiosity, do you have different diameter tires on the vehicle than what it was built with/configured for? If so, it might be some sort of corruption of the ABS reference speed and ABS thinking that the tires are slipping/skidding.
 

BAronco

Big Bend
Active Member
Joined
Nov 29, 2022
Threads
3
Messages
28
Reaction score
9
Location
Detroit
Vehicle(s)
2022 Bronco Big Bend
Your Bronco Model
Big Bend
TLDR: Vehicle is losing brake pressure when steering wheel is turned to the extreme and coming to a stop.

2.3 Badlands. A few weeks back I began noticing occasional loss of brake pressure when moving at slow speeds, and particularly when parallel parking. The brake pedal loses most of its pressure and reaches all the way to the floor. aka spongy brakes.

I brought the Bronco to the dealership service to have a look at the brake system. They could not reproduce the problem, but bled the brake lines anyway for good measure. Unfortunately bleeding the brakes didn't help and the problem persists.

It took me a few days of trial and error, but I can now reliably reproduce the problem. I've narrowed it down to the brakes losing pressure when the steering wheel is turned to it's extreme (e.g. when parallel parking.)

Steps to reproduce:
1. Pull up next to the car in front of the spot I intend to pull into.
2. Put the car in reverse and cut the wheel all the way.
3. Begin pulling into the spot.
4. Get the ass end into the spot and cut the wheel all the way in the opposite direction.
5. Apply brake. Brakes lose pressure and I need to sink the brake pedal all the way to the floor to bring the car to a complete stop.

Has anyone experienced this problem before? Is there anyone mechanically inclined who can weigh in on the problem? Ideally it would be great if there is a Ford engineer on the board who can provide some insight.

My brakes are always really spongy with a 2.3 non SAS. It just feels wrong. Anyone else have that problem?
 

Sponsored
OP
OP
JohnHunter

JohnHunter

Badlands
Member
First Name
John
Joined
Apr 19, 2022
Threads
2
Messages
17
Reaction score
4
Location
Washington
Vehicle(s)
Tacoma
Your Bronco Model
Badlands
Just out of curiosity, do you have different diameter tires on the vehicle than what it was built with/configured for? If so, it might be some sort of corruption of the ABS reference speed and ABS thinking that the tires are slipping/skidding.
All stock everything. Tires, wheels, suspension, brakes.
 
OP
OP
JohnHunter

JohnHunter

Badlands
Member
First Name
John
Joined
Apr 19, 2022
Threads
2
Messages
17
Reaction score
4
Location
Washington
Vehicle(s)
Tacoma
Your Bronco Model
Badlands
My brakes are always really spongy with a 2.3 non SAS. It just feels wrong. Anyone else have that problem?
My brakes felt fine until I started experiencing this problem.
 

Solfive

Badlands
Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 20, 2020
Threads
8
Messages
321
Reaction score
789
Location
NV
Vehicle(s)
2008 JKUR
Your Bronco Model
Badlands
Scary man! Glad it hasn’t resulted in an accident, even at low speeds. Hopefully someone here will have experience or good advice for you.
 

Lcubed

Badlands
Well-Known Member
First Name
l
Joined
Jul 27, 2020
Threads
24
Messages
2,017
Reaction score
3,070
Location
UsA
Vehicle(s)
VW golf r, 2023 ManBadSquatch
Your Bronco Model
Badlands
Clubs
 
TLDR: Vehicle is losing brake pressure when steering wheel is turned to the extreme and coming to a stop.

2.3 Badlands SAS. A few weeks back I began noticing occasional loss of brake pressure when moving at slow speeds, and particularly when parallel parking. The brake pedal loses most of its pressure and reaches all the way to the floor. aka spongy brakes.

I brought the Bronco to the dealership service to have a look at the brake system. They could not reproduce the problem, but bled the brake lines anyway for good measure. Unfortunately bleeding the brakes didn't help and the problem persists.

It took me a few days of trial and error, but I can now reliably reproduce the problem. I've narrowed it down to the brakes losing pressure when the steering wheel is turned to it's extreme (e.g. when parallel parking.)

Steps to reproduce:
1. Pull up next to the car in front of the spot I intend to pull into.
2. Put the car in reverse and cut the wheel all the way.
3. Begin pulling into the spot.
4. Get the ass end into the spot and cut the wheel all the way in the opposite direction.
5. Apply brake. Brakes lose pressure and I need to sink the brake pedal all the way to the floor to bring the car to a complete stop.

Has anyone experienced this problem before? Is there anyone mechanically inclined who can weigh in on the problem? Ideally it would be great if there is a Ford engineer on the board who can provide some insight.
does the brakes come back to pressure afterwards?
or after restarting the engine?
or turning the steering wheel away from the extreme position?

it almost sounds like you're crimping the vacuum line at extreme steering position

of course, it could be this:

https://www.bronco6g.com/forum/threads/2-3-vacuum-brake-boost-failure.51629/
 

Sponsored

goatman2

Badlands
Well-Known Member
First Name
Richard
Joined
Nov 2, 2021
Threads
7
Messages
551
Reaction score
1,533
Location
Bakersfield
Website
gandgautorepair.com
Vehicle(s)
F450, Jeep XJ, Porsche 911, 2dr Badlands
Your Bronco Model
Badlands
If it only happens when the wheel is turned to lock, like when parking, I would check to see if the brake caliper is pushed against the control arm for some reason. I have experienced this with Jeeps. If the caliper is pushed against the control arm then the pedal can go to the floor with no resistance since the caliper has been artificially pushed so isn't completely sitting against the brake pads. Would be strange for this to happen on a totally stock Bronco, but it would explain what you are experiencing. If you can reproduce it any time, then I would make it happen and see if one push of the brake pedal corrected the problem. If so I would strongly suspect the caliper is hitting something.
 
OP
OP
JohnHunter

JohnHunter

Badlands
Member
First Name
John
Joined
Apr 19, 2022
Threads
2
Messages
17
Reaction score
4
Location
Washington
Vehicle(s)
Tacoma
Your Bronco Model
Badlands
does the brakes come back to pressure afterwards?
or after restarting the engine?
or turning the steering wheel away from the extreme position?

it almost sounds like you're crimping the vacuum line at extreme steering position

of course, it could be this:

https://www.bronco6g.com/forum/threads/2-3-vacuum-brake-boost-failure.51629/
The brakes do come back to pressure after turning the wheel back to a less extreme angle. Pumping the brakes seems to help too. Agreed that it seems like either the vacuum line or maybe somehow the brake line getting choked. It also happens in both directions, extreme left and right.
 
OP
OP
JohnHunter

JohnHunter

Badlands
Member
First Name
John
Joined
Apr 19, 2022
Threads
2
Messages
17
Reaction score
4
Location
Washington
Vehicle(s)
Tacoma
Your Bronco Model
Badlands
If it only happens when the wheel is turned to lock, like when parking, I would check to see if the brake caliper is pushed against the control arm for some reason. I have experienced this with Jeeps. If the caliper is pushed against the control arm then the pedal can go to the floor with no resistance since the caliper has been artificially pushed so isn't completely sitting against the brake pads. Would be strange for this to happen on a totally stock Bronco, but it would explain what you are experiencing. If you can reproduce it any time, then I would make it happen and see if one push of the brake pedal corrected the problem. If so I would strongly suspect the caliper is hitting something.
Thanks! I'll give this information to the mechanic.
 
OP
OP
JohnHunter

JohnHunter

Badlands
Member
First Name
John
Joined
Apr 19, 2022
Threads
2
Messages
17
Reaction score
4
Location
Washington
Vehicle(s)
Tacoma
Your Bronco Model
Badlands
Last spring/summer wasn't there a known problem with some factory debris in the vacuum lines causing brake problems ? Have this vague memory that Ford was replacing lots of the vacuum lines/fittings around that time

Tomorrow you could ask @flip
He would know
Thanks. Will add to the list of things for dealer mechanic to check. I know little about these things, so I bet the mechanic would absolutely love for me to give him advice.
 

Area51BS

Badlands
Well-Known Member
First Name
Ron
Joined
Sep 20, 2022
Threads
228
Messages
3,110
Reaction score
5,012
Location
Florida
Vehicle(s)
Badlands non SAS 4dr 2.3
Your Bronco Model
Badlands
The brakes do come back to pressure after turning the wheel back to a less extreme angle. Pumping the brakes seems to help too. Agreed that it seems like either the vacuum line or maybe somehow the brake line getting choked. It also happens in both directions, extreme left and right.
Not sure how a choked or pinched brake line would cause pedal to become spongy or bottom out. No different than folding over a garden hose to remove nozzle while water is on. Pressure stays same between faucet and pinch.
Sponsored

 
 





Top