hoodsstalker
11-09-2006, 09:56 PM
Hello everyone, I own a 525i a/t with about 134k miles on it.
the problem i've had with my bmw is one that i caused, so before i ask what i can do let me tell you what i did to cause my problem. it was around march when i was in the parking lot of pep-boys, i bought a small quart of valvoline steering fluid and ATS fluid for my steering wheel and transmission that had been acting up on cold mornings. i popped open the hood and looked for the steering fluid resevior, in my ignorance and foolishness i poured almost the entire quart into the brake fluid resevior(that little circle icon to represent the brake looked like a steering wheel at the time). oblivious to the error i had just made i went about my daily tasks and about two days later i began noticing a considerable decrease in the firmness of my brake pedal. Almost a week later, i informed my dad about what i had done and showed him were i poured powersteering fluid. he quickly pulled out from his tool bag a tiny rubber pouch with a metalic tube attached to it and vacuumed out a large portion of the powersteering fluid that i had poured into the brake fluid resevior. he said hopefully it hadnt entered the lines enough to clog the system and cause the ABS to fail. about a month went by and i still had decreased braking firmness. about a month later the braking ability of the car was fairly poor, so i decided to replace the front and rear brake pads which is when the problem immobilized the car. i went on to the bmwe34website and printed out a step by step tutorial on replacing the brake pads. the front brake pads came out and i installed them effortlessly but when it came to the rear brakes i had a problem. on either side the caliper and piston would not reset far enough for me to fit the new replacement pads. i went online and read step by step on bleeding them. in the tutorial it warned that if air would slip into the lines while bleeding i could have complete brake failure. while i was bleeding the brakes the pistons and caliper moved all the way and allowed me to reset, i was extremely excited. i then took the car for a test run, and the rear brakes failed to engage. i didnt know what to do and a friend suggested taking it to a shop to have it vacummed by the machine they have at the shop. i had the process done twice and still the rear brakes failed to engage. in conclusion the mechanic as well as my father formulated that the problem lies in the master cylinder. if i were to buy the master cylinder online and attempt to install it myself would it be difficult? would that fix my problem? whats the price of the job im looking at? being that my brakes are ABS does that make the issue more complicated or is there something i'm over looking? i havent driven the car in over 4 months because fo this problem , any suggestions or advice would be greatly appreciated
thank you for your time.
the problem i've had with my bmw is one that i caused, so before i ask what i can do let me tell you what i did to cause my problem. it was around march when i was in the parking lot of pep-boys, i bought a small quart of valvoline steering fluid and ATS fluid for my steering wheel and transmission that had been acting up on cold mornings. i popped open the hood and looked for the steering fluid resevior, in my ignorance and foolishness i poured almost the entire quart into the brake fluid resevior(that little circle icon to represent the brake looked like a steering wheel at the time). oblivious to the error i had just made i went about my daily tasks and about two days later i began noticing a considerable decrease in the firmness of my brake pedal. Almost a week later, i informed my dad about what i had done and showed him were i poured powersteering fluid. he quickly pulled out from his tool bag a tiny rubber pouch with a metalic tube attached to it and vacuumed out a large portion of the powersteering fluid that i had poured into the brake fluid resevior. he said hopefully it hadnt entered the lines enough to clog the system and cause the ABS to fail. about a month went by and i still had decreased braking firmness. about a month later the braking ability of the car was fairly poor, so i decided to replace the front and rear brake pads which is when the problem immobilized the car. i went on to the bmwe34website and printed out a step by step tutorial on replacing the brake pads. the front brake pads came out and i installed them effortlessly but when it came to the rear brakes i had a problem. on either side the caliper and piston would not reset far enough for me to fit the new replacement pads. i went online and read step by step on bleeding them. in the tutorial it warned that if air would slip into the lines while bleeding i could have complete brake failure. while i was bleeding the brakes the pistons and caliper moved all the way and allowed me to reset, i was extremely excited. i then took the car for a test run, and the rear brakes failed to engage. i didnt know what to do and a friend suggested taking it to a shop to have it vacummed by the machine they have at the shop. i had the process done twice and still the rear brakes failed to engage. in conclusion the mechanic as well as my father formulated that the problem lies in the master cylinder. if i were to buy the master cylinder online and attempt to install it myself would it be difficult? would that fix my problem? whats the price of the job im looking at? being that my brakes are ABS does that make the issue more complicated or is there something i'm over looking? i havent driven the car in over 4 months because fo this problem , any suggestions or advice would be greatly appreciated
thank you for your time.