Has anyone seen this before? The handbrake cable was coming into contact (not sure exactly when this was happening) with the brake pipe (the copper one) behind the rear nearside wheel. Of course I didn't notice anything was wrong until the pipe burst open, leading to a rather interesting drive last Sunday...
Could the pipe have got bent at some stage, or fitted incorrectly? The other side was fine, but things aren't symmetrical anyway.
Mine has rear discs and ABS with a Teves servo, if that makes much difference.
perhaps someones Routed the handbrake cable the wrong way,and its been working against the pipe,
something ive not heard of Happening on a 406,
Copper pipe sugests to me its not an original one, so perhaps when it was replaced its been slighty too long and theyve put a bend in it to compensate for the length ,resulting it to be close to cables, Hard to guess,
glad you walked away from it tho, couid of been much worse,
Put braided brake lines on your car - the stainless steel braiding will help keep the brake lines safe, and has the added benefit of preventing the pipes from expanding under pressure, resulting in more pressure being applied against the discs (firmer brake pedal).
Definitely sounds like the handbrake cable has not been properly routed.
Glad you came away from that one unscathed!
2002 (D9) Peugeot 406 Coupe SE, 2.2 litre Petrol. Scarlet Red/Rouge Ecarlate/Rosso Scarlatto. Black Leather interior. SOLD
2008 (E60 LCI) BMW 525i M-Sport, 3.0 litre Petrol. Carbonschwarz Metallic. Black Dakota Leather and Myrtlewood interior.
highlander wrote:Put braided brake lines on your car - the stainless steel braiding will help keep the brake lines safe, and has the added benefit of preventing the pipes from expanding under pressure, resulting in more pressure being applied against the discs (firmer brake pedal).
Braided rubber brake hoses would be a VERY poor and incredibly expensive substitute for solid steel tubing. You'd have a hell of a time adapting the car body and fittings to accept the much wider diameter hoses and you'd be exposing yourself to severe risk of slicing a brake line where it goes through the chassis for the front wheels whereas a solid pipe has no such issues.
<steve_earwig> I think this forum is more about keeping our cars going with minimal outlay than giving our cars more reason to go bang
lozz wrote:Copper pipe sugests to me its not an original one...
Actually I'm not sure what the broken one was but it was painted black. Are the originals steel or something? Maybe the replacement was steel too (zinc plated or something?)...
I'm not sure if the mechanic re-routed the handbrake cable or re-routed the pipe (or both) but he said they shouldn't come into contact any more - it's definitely something I'll keep an eye on anyway.
I have noticed the handbrake is a bit less useless on hills now
The way the brakes failed was a bit odd - at first I noticed when braking lightly the pedal would slowly drop to the floor, but when I braked hard it seemed to hold up fine so I didn't think there was anything seriously wrong (maybe vacuum pump playing up or something). The warning lights and beeping didn't occur until about 20 minutes later when things had got worse and I had to keep pumping the brake pedal to get anything useful out of it (lots of engine braking too). Only then did I stop, get out and notice the brake fluid dribbling out the back...
iwas driving a car once and all the lot went, Brakes,powersteering clutch everything,
that was one of them old Hovercraft citroens bx or sumat, wouidnt drive on of them again that was all run on green fluid tho,
ithink most cars now are desighned so all the braking system dosent fail at once, still not good when it does tho,
The later Citroens have loads of safety valves and stuff, not much use if the pump goes I guess...
I did notice on my D8 the l/h brake cable was rubbing on the brake pipe to the caliper in a similar way to that described so this probably is worth looking at on everyone's cars. I would say though, that it looked like it'd wear through the cable before it did anything to the pipe. I wrapped tape round it
mjb wrote:Braided rubber brake hoses would be a VERY poor and incredibly expensive substitute for solid steel tubing.
Ooh bugger, must've mis-read this problem. I thought this was the handbrake cable chafing against and bursting through the flexible rubber part of the piping that goes to the rear calipers (i.e. the part that people buy braided replacements for), rather than the solid fixed pipework that runs the length of the car.
Carry on
2002 (D9) Peugeot 406 Coupe SE, 2.2 litre Petrol. Scarlet Red/Rouge Ecarlate/Rosso Scarlatto. Black Leather interior. SOLD
2008 (E60 LCI) BMW 525i M-Sport, 3.0 litre Petrol. Carbonschwarz Metallic. Black Dakota Leather and Myrtlewood interior.
I thought braided hoses were just for the end where it connects to the caliper, they don't replace the copper pipe that goes from end to end of the car?
leestudd30 wrote:I thought braided hoses were just for the end where it connects to the caliper, they don't replace the copper pipe that goes from end to end of the car?
That's right.
I had thought that the part of the brake system that had failed was the part between the caliper and the rigid piping. However, as MJB says, the part that failed was the rigid piping.
If it had been the rubber brake hoses between the caliper and the rigid piping that had failed, I think I would have been right with my suggestion of replacing these with braided hoses and re-routing the handbrake cable correctly in order to prevent this from happening again. But since it wasn't the brake hoses that had failed, I just looked like a muppet
2002 (D9) Peugeot 406 Coupe SE, 2.2 litre Petrol. Scarlet Red/Rouge Ecarlate/Rosso Scarlatto. Black Leather interior. SOLD
2008 (E60 LCI) BMW 525i M-Sport, 3.0 litre Petrol. Carbonschwarz Metallic. Black Dakota Leather and Myrtlewood interior.