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Tampilkan postingan dengan label Bentley. Tampilkan semua postingan

Selasa, 03 November 2015

Sudden Brake Failure in Shadow-era Rolls-Royce and Bentley Motorcars



How do you know the brakes in your Shadow-era Rolls-Royce are safe?  If you are like most people you trust the warning lamps on the dash.  When you start the car and you see the lamps glow, flicker, and go out – you know they work.  Lamps out - brakes safe.  You expect the lamps to warn you if either system loses pressure, so you can stop the car before brake pressure is lost.



Can that system fail?  Last week, I learned that the answer is yes.   Shadow brakes can fail without warning.  I know because we had it happen to a car in our yard.  The only thing that saved the car from crashing into the building was the simultaneous shift into park and stepping hard on the emergency brake.  And when the car stopped we realized we would not have been so lucky if the speeds had been higher – those tricks won’t do much at 60mph.

The next morning we hooked pressure gauges to the test points and read 2,000psi on the rear circuit, but just 1,300psi on the front at idle, rising to 2,000 as the engine sped up.  That puzzled us because the pumps were recently changed, and the accumulators were freshly charged on rebuilt blocks.  Why the low pressure? 

There was no obvious reason the front circuit should have been low.  And an even bigger question remained – how did the brakes fail with those system pressures?  1,300psi at idle is low, but it’s still plenty to stop the car.  And the rear had full pressure all along.  So what happened?  The pressures must have fallen to zero on the test drive, and we were at a loss to how that could have happened.

We did a flow test, which one circuit passed and the other came close.  That didn’t answer the failure either, but it raised a question.  What would account for low flow in a newly rebuilt pump circuit?  We have seen that happen with collapsed lines from the reservoir to pump, but these lines looked good.  

We suspected the answer might lie in the hydraulic reservoirs, located on the left fender well just forward of the firewall.  We started removing the screws that hold the cover in place - something that never happens on most Silver Shadow cars.  Why would you remove the cover?  You can see the fluid through the sight glasses, and you fill through the caps on top. The unit itself is seldom taken apart.  But it should be, as our exploration revealed!


The first thing to check was the intake screens in the reservoir and that is where we found our answer.

Sludge in a Silver Shadow hydraulic reservoir (c) JE Robison Service



What you see in the photo is a solid inch of sludge, and the intake screens are actually collapsed from the force of the pumps trying to suck solid sludge through the fine mesh.  Take a look at this comparison:



You can see how the pump was straining for a long time to pull fluid through those clogged strainers. Intake restriction is surely a cause of pump failure in some of these cars.  And it can get worse - if a pump fails it can seize and damage the pushrod or even the cam. So you can see how this gel issue can turn into major mechanical trouble in addition to the obvious hydraulic problems it causes.

I was shocked to find such a gelled mess of fluid, but the car in question had been stored for 10 years, and a review of online forums reveals quite a few instances of brake fluid gelling in cars and motorcycles during long term storage.  We have actually seen that ourselves, as shown in this photo of what we found in a Jaguar XK120 brake reservoir after being parked 6 years.




The fix for this - on the Rolls - was to remove and clean the reservoir, and replace the screens.   

For the sake of comparison, this is what a disassembled reservoir looks like on a car in our restoration shop:




A restored RR363 hydraulic reservoir from a Silver Shadow (C) JE Robison Service 

After cleaning this car's reservoir, we also replaced the suction lines to the pumps, and thoroughly flushed the system.  But flushing only goes so far.  After running the car 100 miles this is what we found on removing the reservoir top again



As you can see the rear circuit has turned rather dark, and there are little bits of debris accumulating in the tank.  In these cars the rear hydraulic circuit powers the level control, and we have known the rams to build up sludge, some of which seems to be making its way back to the reservoir.  The photos below show the level control circuit on this car, which was a repository for more sludge:





The cure for that: Take apart and clean the level control circuit.  In this car, the level control hadn’t worked, and the owner had said to ignore it. But we could not do that, when we saw how it was polluting the clean fluid in front. We took apart and cleaned both rams, cleaned the valves, and blew clear the lines. In retrospect I see that the level control failure was due to gelled fluid preventing proper operation. It worked once this was done.

So one takeaway from that is that the whole system should be cleaned and serviced, even if the owner does not care about self-leveling.  What seems like a place to economize on service (level control) could well end up a cause of rear circuit brake failure.

The other takeaway is that the reservoirs should be opened up and inspected when these cars receive major brake service, or when they are serviced after long-term storage (more than one winter.)  There is no external sign of sludge in the reservoir, and if you don't open it up and look your first clue may be the total and sudden failure of the system.

This inspection is a nuisance, with 14 screws holding the cap in place, after which the screens and plates have to come off.  And if the reservoir needs to be cleaned you could be into a half-day project.  But do it anyway, in the interest of safety!  The lesson of this car is that the fluid reservoir should be checked before the car is driven.

And when the reservoir is filled, be sure to use the RR363 fluid that's made special for these cars.  Ordinary brake fluid does not have the castor oil lubricant the brake pumps require, and substitution of a different fluid can lead to brake pump wear and premature failure.  That's a failure that's easily avoided - just use the right stuff!  It is ok to top these systems with DOT3 fluid in emergency but if that is done the RR363 should be put back in at the earliest opportunity.

And one final thing – why didn’t the warning lights come on?  In some of these cars the warning lamps are at the end of long dead-end pipe runs.  In this vehicle, the line to the sensor was jammed by gelled fluid, and there was no live connection between the sensors and the fluid they were supposed to monitor. Yet they looked good from outside!  That just shows how appearances can deceive.  Particularly since this car originally had the warning lights lit, and they went out when the car was first started up.

The advice in this article applies to 1965-1980 production Rolls-Royce and Bentley motorcars that use pressurized RR363 hydraulics.  This includes all Corniche, Shadow, Wraith, T Type, and T2 built in that period.




(c) 2015 John Elder Robison
John Elder Robison is the general manager of J E Robison Service Company, celebrating 30 years of independent Rolls-Royce and Bentley restoration and repair in Springfield, Massachusetts.  John is a longtime technical consultant to the Rolls-Royce and Bentley clubs, and he’s owned and restored many fine British motorcars.  Find him online at www.robisonservice.com or in the real world at 413-785-1665

Reading this article will make you smarter, especially when it comes to car stuff.  So it's good for you.  But don't take that too far - printing and eating it will probably make you sick.


Sabtu, 19 September 2015

We Have A Winner! The British Invasion Car Show

At the concours at today’s 2015 British Invasion motorcar show in Stowe, Vermont . . .


Gus & Christine Bjorklund of Chelmsford, MA took 3rdplace in a black 1978 Bentley T2 sedan



Modern Car Society president Jim Facinelli drove all the way from Pennsylvania in his 1989 Silver Spur to take 2nd

1989 Rolls-Royce Silver Spur - Jim Facinelli  (c)2015 JE Robison
We presented John Rando’s 1972 long wheelbase Silver Shadow, for a 1st place win.  As 1st place winner I had an opportunity to speak for a moment and I think the audience was surprised to hear I am autistic and the detail they saw in this vehicle is in part a manifestation of my autistic fixation on motorcars.  I also thanked the car's owner John Rando for his support of us, and making this restoration possible.  It's funny . . . millions of people have read my books and writings on autism but I'll bet that part of my life was unknown to 99% of the people at that show.





There was a very nice 1927 Bentley from Quebec.


Paul and Catherine Stanley’s 1951 Bentley Mark VI took Best in Show, from Gloucester MA




Finally, out on the people’s choice field there were 12 more Rolls-Royce and Bentley motorcars, and two for sale in the corral.






In the Land Rover area my friends David and Shelly Rifken brought their two Land Rover Defenders



My son drove up our 1990 Jaguar XJ-S convertible



And the field was filled with 650 magnificent British cars on a fine early fall day






We had a great time at the how.  It's always good to see our friends from the world of collector cars.  And thanks to everyone at Robison Service and of course my family for making it all possible.

(c) 2015 John Elder Robison
John Elder Robison is the general manager of J E Robison Service Company, celebrating 30 years of independent Land Rover restoration and repair in Springfield, Massachusetts.  John is a longtime technical consultant to the Land Rover clubs, and he’s owned and restored many fine Rovers.  Find him online at www.robisonservice.com or in the real world at 413-785-1665

Reading this article will make you smarter, especially when it comes to car stuff.  So it's good for you.  But don't take that too far - printing and eating it will probably make you sick.

Selasa, 04 Agustus 2015

Rolls Royce Corniche and Bentley Continental convertible top failures

 
A fine 20,000 Series Corniche convertible from 1987  (C) JE Robison
Convertible tops on the Corniche-era cars tend to be fairly reliable.  They usually wear out, rather than fail catastrophically.  Usually.

There is one issue that can lead to sudden and disastrous failure, and extensive damage to the car.  That is separation of the convertible top from the windshield header bar while the car is moving at highway speed. 

If that happens the force of the wind will almost certainly blow the top fabric out of the frame, and the metal top frame will be badly deformed or destroyed.  With parts going out of production this may make the car a total loss.

How does this happen, you ask?  It comes about when the header bar latches break, and they can break without any warning.  That’s the purpose of this post – to encourage you to check your latches and change them if they show signs of failure.

Look at the photo below.  It’s a typical 1980s convertible, and the latch looks pretty normal, right?  Look closer – it’s not “normal.”



The photos below show the latch base with the lever removed.  As you can see the cast base is cracked and moments away from breaking.  The thing is, you would never have seen this defect unless you pulled the latch up and made a point to look under.  We do that on every Corniche we get for service now, and I suggest you do the same.





If you find cracks like these the only safe action is to replace the latch.  OEM latches were $3,000 when they went out of production but Albers sells a reproduction latch for under $1,000 as of summer 2015.  We are using those with good success.

A reproduction header bar latch (c) JE Robison Service

When you fit the latch don’t forget to look at the header bar seal – a common source of water leakage.


This post applies to 1967-on Shadow drop heads, and Rolls-Royce Corniche and Bentley Continental drop heads with header latches.


(c) 2015 John Elder Robison
John Elder Robison is the general manager of J E Robison Service Company, celebrating 30 years of independent Rolls-Royce and Bentley restoration and repair specialists in Springfield, Massachusetts.  John is a longtime technical consultant to the RROC and other car clubs, and he’s owned and restored many fine vehicles.  Find him online at www.robisonservice.com or in the real world at 413-785-1665

Reading this article will make you smarter, especially when it comes to car stuff.  So it's good for you.  But don't take that too far - printing and eating it will probably make you sick.