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Pedal movement pushes a piston through a fluid-filled bore. Once the replenishing port is closed, further displacement raises pressure throughout the connected circuit. Hydraulic pressure acts on much larger caliper or wheel-cylinder piston areas to create braking force.
A tandem master cylinder places two hydraulic sections in line. Under normal use both operate together; if one loses fluid or pressure, mechanical contact allows the remaining section to work with greater pedal travel.
| Arrangement | Features | Service concern |
|---|---|---|
| Tandem conventional master | Two piston circuits in one bore. | Circuit ports, bore and pushrod depth. |
| Stepped-bore master | Different bore sections influence displacement/pressure. | Exact internal calibration required. |
| Master with integrated reservoir | Reservoir and level switch supplied as an assembly. | Capacity, angle, sensor and cap match. |
| Remote-reservoir master | Feed hoses connect a separate reservoir. | Grommets, hose compatibility and routing. |
| Electro-hydraulic brake unit | Pedal simulator, pump and master functions interact. | High-pressure isolation, diagnostics and calibration. |
| Manual/unassisted master | Pedal acts without vacuum/hydraulic booster. | Bore and pedal ratio determine effort. |
| Clutch/brake combined historic unit | Shared reservoir or body serves distinct circuits. | Classic-vehicle seal and fluid requirements. |
A precisely finished aluminium or iron bore guides pistons and seals. Corrosion, scoring or wear creates bypass paths. Honing is permitted only for serviceable designs within diameter and finish limits.
Pistons carry cup seals, springs and sometimes centre valves. Their sequence and orientation are calibrated. Mixing repair-kit parts between bore variants is unsafe.
Elastomer cups seal under pressure while allowing replenishment at rest. Petroleum contamination causes swelling and system-wide damage. Seal material must match the specified brake fluid.
Tiny ports allow thermal expansion and release residual pressure. A piston held forward by incorrect pushrod clearance can keep a port closed, causing brakes to bind as fluid heats.
Grommets seal the reservoir into the body. The level switch warns of fluid loss but does not measure moisture or fluid quality. A cracked reservoir or hardened grommet creates external leakage.
| Check | Possible variation | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Bore diameter | Brake package and pedal-effort calibration. | Changes displacement, travel and force. |
| Circuit split/ports | Diagonal or front/rear, thread and location. | Pipes must connect to intended circuits. |
| Booster interface | Flange, seal and pushrod socket depth. | Controls free play and full stroke. |
| Drive side | Left-/right-hand-drive pipe and reservoir layout. | Clearance and circuit routing differ. |
| Brake option | Disc/drum, performance brakes and stability control. | Fluid displacement requirements change. |
| Reservoir | Integrated, transferable or remote. | Angle, capacity and sensor must match. |
| Build date | ABS module, port or seal revision. | Similar castings may not interchange. |
| Supply contents | Bare cylinder, reservoir, grommets and plugs. | Determines additional new parts. |
For a given pedal displacement, a larger bore moves more fluid but creates less pressure for the same pushrod force. A smaller bore creates more pressure but needs greater stroke to move the same caliper volume. Vehicle engineers balance this with pedal ratio and booster assistance.
Changing bore as an “upgrade” without calculating caliper areas, rear cylinders, ABS behaviour and pedal geometry can create long travel or excessive effort. Use the specified master cylinder or a professionally engineered complete brake conversion.
A vacuum booster, hydraulic booster or electric brake actuator multiplies pedal force. Its output pushrod must contact the master piston with the designed free clearance. Too much clearance causes lost travel; too little holds the piston forward and blocks compensation ports.
Fluid found inside a vacuum booster can come from the master rear seal and damage the booster diaphragm. Inspect and remove accumulated fluid safely. A failing booster creates a hard pedal, air hiss or assistance change rather than a classic slowly sinking pedal.
Some electric boosters and brake-by-wire systems require diagnostic depressurisation and stroke-sensor calibration. They may apply pressure with the ignition off.
| Fluid family | General characteristic | Compatibility rule |
|---|---|---|
| DOT 3 glycol | Hygroscopic glycol-based fluid for specified systems. | Use only where vehicle permits its performance. |
| DOT 4 glycol | Higher wet/dry boiling requirements than DOT 3 category. | Exact low-viscosity or approval can still be required. |
| DOT 4 low viscosity | Cold-flow optimised for fast ABS/ESC modulation. | Use when the brake system specifies it. |
| DOT 5 silicone | Non-glycol silicone fluid used in limited applications. | Not interchangeable with glycol systems. |
| DOT 5.1 glycol | Glycol performance category with high boiling requirements. | Do not confuse with silicone DOT 5. |
| Mineral hydraulic fluid | Used by certain specialised braking/hydraulic systems. | Petroleum/mineral fluid can destroy glycol-system seals. |
Use the exact manufacturer specification, not colour. Brake fluid absorbs water from air, lowering wet boiling performance. Keep containers sealed and use fresh fluid; do not pour bled fluid back into the reservoir.
With steady pedal force and no external leak, worn cup seals can allow fluid to move past a piston internally, making the pedal descend. The movement can be slow and temperature-dependent. No fluid necessarily leaves the system.
ABS modulation valves, flexible hoses and caliper seals can also move or bypass under pressure. Isolating circuits by clamping hoses can damage them and is used only where an approved tool and procedure permit it. Plugging master outlets for diagnosis requires correct rated fittings and cleanliness.
A pedal that sinks only with engine start may partly reflect normal booster assistance. Compare continuing travel and hydraulic pressure against specifications.
Inspect pipe ports, reservoir grommets, body casting and rear seal/booster junction. Fluid can track along pipes and paint, making source location deceptive. Clean safely and reapply pressure while observing.
Any falling reservoir level requires immediate system inspection. Pads wearing normally lower the level gradually as caliper pistons move, but topping up without checking wear can cause overflow when pistons are retracted.
| Symptom | Possible master-cylinder cause | Other checks |
|---|---|---|
| Pedal slowly sinks under steady force | Internal seal bypass. | External leaks, ABS valves and booster effect. |
| Long pedal, pumps higher | Air or excessive component clearance. | Drum adjustment, disc knock-back and leaks. |
| Hard pedal | Rarely master bore seizure; usually assistance issue. | Booster, vacuum/hydraulic supply and pedal linkage. |
| Brakes bind as they heat | Blocked compensation port or no pushrod clearance. | Hoses, calipers and parking brake. |
| Fluid at booster joint | Rear master seal leakage. | Booster contamination and paint damage. |
| One circuit weak | Piston/circuit fault or incorrect port connection. | Downstream hydraulic and friction components. |
| Warning after replacement | Level sensor, pressure correlation, air or coding. | Bleed and setup procedure. |
Bench bleeding removes air trapped within new piston chambers before installation. Secure the mounting flange in soft jaws without crushing the body. Fit the supplied or approved return tubes from outlet ports into clean compatible fluid.
Keep tube ends submerged and push the piston slowly with the specified tool through a limited stroke. Rapid or full dry strokes can damage seals. Continue until no bubbles return and cap ports before transfer.
Some units must be bled on the vehicle or through diagnostic actuation; follow supplied instructions. Never use mineral oil or assembly grease in glycol-fluid cylinders.
Compare bore, ports, pushrod socket and flange. Transfer the reservoir only when approved, using new grommets lubricated with clean brake fluid. Do not use petroleum grease.
Guide the cylinder over the booster pushrod without forcing it. If it will not seat by hand, recheck depth and alignment; tightening nuts to pull it home can preload the piston or damage the booster.
Start every brake pipe union by hand for several turns. Cross-threaded aluminium ports are unsafe. Torque outlets and mounting nuts to specification and restore pipe support clips.
Use pressure, vacuum or pedal bleeding only as approved and maintain reservoir level. Bleeding order may be based on hydraulic circuit, not physical distance. Never push a used master piston beyond its normal bore range during aggressive pedal bleeding, because corrosion can damage seals.
ABS/ESC modulators can trap air and require diagnostic pump and valve operation. Brake-by-wire systems may need a scan-tool bleed with high-pressure precautions. Repeat conventional stages as instructed after actuation.
Use clear clean tubing and dispose of expelled fluid. A bubble-free hose does not prove all air has left the modulator.
Service brakes are assessed for operation, efficiency, balance, fluid leakage and related warnings under current MOT requirements. A defective master cylinder can produce a dangerous loss of braking even if one tandem circuit remains.
Do not drive with a sinking or soft pedal, fluid loss, brake warning or uncertain circuit integrity. Arrange recovery. Brake fluid is harmful and damages paint; collect it for authorised disposal and keep it away from mineral oils.
Q: What does a brake master cylinder do?
A: It converts pedal force and travel into hydraulic pressure.
Q: Why are two pistons used?
A: Tandem circuits provide reduced backup braking if one circuit fails.
Q: What causes a slowly sinking pedal?
A: Internal bypass is possible, but external leaks and ABS faults need checking.
Q: Does a hard pedal mean the master cylinder failed?
A: Usually assistance, linkage or mechanical faults are more likely.
Q: Does bore size matter?
A: Yes. It changes pedal travel, fluid displacement and required force.
Q: Must a new master cylinder be bench-bled?
A: Follow the unit and vehicle procedure; many conventional units require it.
Q: Can DOT 5 be mixed with DOT 4?
A: No. Silicone DOT 5 is not interchangeable with glycol DOT 4.
Q: Why do brakes bind after replacement?
A: Incorrect pushrod clearance can block compensation ports.
Q: Can old reservoir grommets be reused?
A: Renew them where specified or hardened/damaged.
Q: Must ABS be activated during bleeding?
A: Where air entered the modulator, the specified diagnostic routine may be necessary.
Q: Can brake pipes be forced to line up?
A: No. Correct parts and natural pipe alignment are required.
Q: Is a firm pedal enough to prove repair?
A: No. Verify leaks, warnings, pressure, efficiency and balance.
Q: Can a master-cylinder fault fail the MOT?
A: Yes through leakage, warning, pedal or braking-performance defects.