hey guys, changing the front brake pads in my 1998 Toyota Regius and now the brake pedal virtually goes straight to the floor. Done a bit of searching on the net and found every suggestion under the sun, from bleeding the brakes, twisted brake line, to adjusting the rear handbrake and the brake booster is stuffed.
It is a Toyota Regius with ABS, everything was fine prior to this, just a routine change as they were getting a bit worn.
To drive, it doesn't feel like the front brakes are doing anything at all.
If I stomp on the pedal it will be firm-ish then slowly move to the floor.
If I pump the pedal it will be nice and hard, but once I hold my foot on it, it will go to the floor.
If I jack it up and get someone to stand on the pedal, I can just turn the front wheel, so they are doing something, just not much!
I changed the pads as usual, pushed the piston back in on each side to get the clearance needed, and refitted the pads. Some people have suggested pushing the piston back in can force the seals in the master cylinder to pop inside out and end up leaking...? True?
Others have suggested doing this on an ABS vehicle can cause an issue with the ABS, so you need to crack open the bleed nipple and remove the cap on the m/c before pushing the piston back in.
Someone else has said they ended up with air in their ABS resiovoir and had to bleed this before it fixed the problem.
Is there any truth to this stuff, or any ideas on what to check / do next?
Thanks
-Matt