Hydroboost problems

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Matahoe

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Hey guys I think my hydroboost isn't working correctly. I was on the road going about 45mph and put the truck in neutral. I then stepped on the the brake a few times to deplete the reserve canister for the hydroboost. As expected the brake pedal became hard and the pedal force required to stop the truck was hard.

I then started the truck while still in neutral and put it in drive. I drove down the road at 45 for a half mile or so. Then came up to a light and needed to stop but the hydroboost brakes wouldn't work at all. It was as if the reserve was depleted but this time the engine was running.

I was unable to find anything similar to this scenario while reading online troubleshooting steps. I am left scratching my head on this one. If anyone can help or point me in the right direction that would be great.
 

Chubbs

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If you are attempting any kind of DIY repair or replacement, even diagnosis of hydraulic assist braking, aka hydroboost, at least buy a workshop manual. I looked up braking diag procedures and there is just a vast amount of literature there. I pulled up this Chiltons online library and highly suggest that you invest just so you have a starting point.

I can tell you right now you are going about this all wrong if you are cutting the ignition while driving down the road and attempting to stop the vehicle. Prob get somebody killed if you continue. Regardless, a manual instructs with the steps & techniques relevant to diagnosing specific symptoms so that you aren't doing random shit as documented in the original post.
 
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Matahoe

Matahoe

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I've already looked in the manuals and also online in other forums. The reason I posted the question is because there is no directly comparable scenario in the troubleshooting literature or elsewhere that I have found. I'm not going to kill anyone being in neutral with the ignition off. Its all pretty controlled. Been doing vehicle mechanics for over 25 years. I am still able to steer and brake....it's just harder. Also, there is no one else on the road at the time as well of the tests. The only person with a remote chance of being killed would be myself but Im 99.99% sure that isn't going to happen at 45 mph less.
 

Rocket Man

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There's no comparable scenario for a reason. Who tries to test a power steering and brake system with no power? That would fall under an emergency scenario where your engine dies and you need to get stopped without crashing which is possible but requires a lot of effort. I don't understand what you're trying to do.
 

swathdiver

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I haven't driven a hydroboost braked car since the 1990s with my '80s Olds and Buicks. Now if memory serves, if the car were to stall the pedal and steering would get hard but could still stop with great effort. Once the engine was restarted, I'm trying my best to recall here, I think it took a few pumps of the pedal to get firm again.

Get yourself an AllDataDIY subscription for your truck and get access to the shop manual and trouble shooting guides.
 

ezstriper

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there is no reserve that I know of, hydro boost uses P/S pressure so as long as the engine is running and belt is on system charges as long as parts working
 

Rocket Man

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there is no reserve that I know of, hydro boost uses P/S pressure so as long as the engine is running and belt is on system charges as long as parts working
That's what I would think too. The power steering pump is used for hydraulic pressure assisted braking as oppoeed to vacuum assisted and I know from experience that the power steering quits when the engine dies so I would expect the power brakes quit also. The systems are tied together.
 

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