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M1078A0 Parking Brake Diagnostics

Lugnuts

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Well, by the title it sounds easy!!!
By the way, a salute to RonMar on an incredible explanation of the air system in these trucks. Thank you Sir.

I have a set of parking brakes that release anytime there is air in the system.
Now I can release them if I remove the line on the Inversion Valve, the one that feeds the Anti-Compounding Valve aka Parking Brake Valve.
I cut to the skinny on diagnostics.
So now having diagnosed the fact that everything is working on the rear correctly and the reason they are releasing is because I have air pressure coming out of the line that goes to the Parking Brake Release Valve on the dash.
The schematic in the manual shows that it goes from the dash valve to the Inversion valve.
So I remove the lines going to the Parking Brake Release Valve so I can locate my line going to the rear. I have air being blown from the rear, through the line so I can locate in the dash.
Having done that I start the truck to locate Supply Side Air and find that my Brake Release Valve is Plumbed correctly.
Next I reinstall Supply lines to Park Release Valve and start truck and low and behold I have air coming out the line that goes from the Park Release Valve to the Inversion Valve for the signal.
So I commence to check my Trailer Valve on the dash, start truck and it is not passing air to anything and another way to say it, it is working correctly but I still have air coming ut the line for the signal for the Inversion Valve.
Before I pull lines on the left frame rail, I figured I would write and ask for assistance. My thematic shows no relay valve in-between but by all indications there must be because I have air coming out that line and by the way it is not coming out on the other end of that line at the dash. The air is only traveling one way.

Any comments are welcome, (even derogatory) I thrive on those! Thanks guys!
 

Ronmar

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From the park control in the dash, a line runs down to the floor forward of the brake pedal/steering column.
If you remove the grill you will see that it runs over to one input port of the top 2way check valve up behind the drivers step. the other input is from the front red glad-hand. The line from the red glad-hand Ts and also feeds a check valve that sends glad-hand air to the wet tank to charge the air system When being towed.

the output from the middle port on the 2way Ts and feeds a pressure sw that controls the park/emer lights in the dash and also feeds a remote control valve that controls air to the hydraulic pump, no hydraulics when park air is applied.

one thing that could be happening is that if that glad-hand was capped/sealed, and that check valve leaked, it would feed wet tank air thru the checkvalve, thru the 2way and back to the inversion valve to release the park brakes.

Since the main park brake control is from the two service tanks thru the park control, the quick check for this is to fill all the air tanks(dryer purges), then shutoff the engine. Park brake control pulled out/brake set, if the brakes are not set, then drain the wet tank. If the brakes set, then the source of the air is the wet tank and that can only be via the top 2way checkvalve.

Now of course the front glad-hands should be vented, and if that regular check was leaking wet tank air back, it should be pouring out that front red glad-hand instead of overriding your park control…
 
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Lugnuts

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WOW! First, I'm going to take a look at the schematics and see that! No, actually I'm first going to thank you for taking the time to answer the question and the smart's and experience you have behind that one!!! Secondly, I will look at that as soon as I can get back to it.
I know that the brakes set when the air is exhausted from the tank. That is the only way that they will set. Otherwise, any air in the system and they are released. I pulled lines from the Trailer Valve on the dash and did not have air at any of those ports but I never thought of removing covers from the Glad Hands themselves.
The other thing you stated was that there ws no air to the hydraulic pump system when the air brakes were released. Not that I don't believe you but I never had cause to try it. I will prove that because you never know when that may be a useful piece of information. Thank you very much!
 

Ronmar

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you can only have VENTED covers on the front glad-hands!

IF YOU HAVE SEALED COVERS ON THE FRONT, that is part of this problem, a leaking check valve(directly below red glad-hand behind bumper) to the wet tank feed would be the other part.
 

Lugnuts

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He means no air to the hydr pump when "park air" is applied, which releases the brakes. Hydr functions can't work when truck is moving, safety feature.
Thank you for clarification. I understood that and my mind went off immediately to prove it and when using these as High Water Trucks for rescue that may come in very handy.
 

Lugnuts

Active member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
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243
43
Location
Myakka City, FL
From the park control in the dash, a line runs down to the floor forward of the brake pedal/steering column.
If you remove the grill you will see that it runs over to one input port of the top 2way check valve up behind the drivers step. the other input is from the front red glad-hand. The line from the red glad-hand Ts and also feeds a check valve that sends glad-hand air to the wet tank to charge the air system When being towed.

the output from the middle port on the 2way Ts and feeds a pressure sw that controls the park/emer lights in the dash and also feeds a remote control valve that controls air to the hydraulic pump, no hydraulics when park air is applied.

one thing that could be happening is that if that glad-hand was capped/sealed, and that check valve leaked, it would feed wet tank air thru the checkvalve, thru the 2way and back to the inversion valve to release the park brakes.

Since the main park brake control is from the two service tanks thru the park control, the quick check for this is to fill all the air tanks(dryer purges), then shutoff the engine. Park brake control pulled out/brake set, if the brakes are not set, then drain the wet tank. If the brakes set, then the source of the air is the wet tank and that can only be via the top 2way checkvalve.

Now of course the front glad-hands should be vented, and if that regular check was leaking wet tank air back, it should be pouring out that front red glad-hand instead of overriding your park control…
Yo Dude!!! You scored 100 percent on that one! Diagnosed just like you said. So then that Check Valve is bad? or can it be repaired? or is it just best to get a new one? By the way, that is a fantastic safety feature all right there. Not too easy to get to but not impossible. Just for grins, what are the other two check valves?
 

Ronmar

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The other two 2way checks inboard of the drivers step below the park 2way?

those interface the front blue glad-hand to the pri&sec service brakes, so a towing vehicle has control of the towed vehicles brakes…

i covered some of the operation in my front glad-hand delete video on utube

 
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Lugnuts

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The problem is found but not verified meaning I found the check valve that connects the Emergency Glad Hand to the Wet Tank in fact was bad. Enclosed is a picture. I will explain the picture because it is not what I expected. I expected to find a spring loaded ball bearing type check valve and it was not. Instead it is a spring loaded steel plate that holds a rubber style seal. I suspect that it was without a cover somewhere along the line because it was terribly rusted and I suspect that it was attempted to be used and the plate got pushed back and stuck thus leaving the rubber seal floating and eventually got push into a non sealing position. The check valve was not where the schematic showed it. My schematic showed it between the Wet Tank and the Dryer but was actually located underneath the Emergency Glad Hand on the difficult to reach frame mount that RonMar spoke of on the video Glad Hand Delete. Salute to you Sir.
I will confirm when this works properly and thanks again.IMG_2140.jpg
 

Lugnuts

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Yep, that is a air system brake check valve… A very nasty one:) That and a capped or plugged red glad-hand was your problem…
So I got my new Brake Check Valve and lo and behold it worked. Thank you.
Now as far as the capped line versus the vented cover, not that I doubted you but I verified it, you are right and the trucks that have a slow release on the parking/ emergency brakes are found not to have vented caps. Remove cover and the brakes release instantly. Interestingly and a question is that I have seen where the rear covers are off and I would say should be venting through the rear and it isn't. What is the reason for that? And the ones that release slowly I have take those covers off and I would probably say that the check valve is going bad or for some reason is not stopping the air from the wet tank because if you hold your thumb in the line you can feel pressure building.
Thanks again all.
 
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