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Last week I replaced the master cylinder twice on my '78 300D and I'm about to do it a third time. The first was the original; which was bypassing at the rear seal and dumping brake fluid back into the booster, and the second, a seemingly good quailty rebuilt unit from my local Napa store. The first replacemet lasted a day before leaking out of the front plug. I replaced it again with a second Napa rebuilt that has lasted for a week but now appears to be bypassing the piston and leaking back into the booster again. Grrrr ... this is boring and besides ... it's giving my brake booster a bad case of indigestion which I'm certain it can ill afford.
![]() I'm retired on disability with a fixed income. Prices are ungodly high for a new cylinder and even the rebuild kit is way up there close to a hundred bucks. I'm fairly certain that cylinder I removed first is the ORIGINAL cylinder from my 150K car since it is painted black like the booster (and not bead blasted clean as a replacement would be). My dilema: should I take a chance and rebuild my own (presumably good) core to save a few bucks OR should I scrap that idea and just pop for a new one OR should I tell Napa to keep tryin' cuz the third time's a charm? ![]() Having owned auto parts stores in the past, I'm somewhat simpathetic to the fact that the pool of cores a rebuilder has to work with in this case are 30+ years old now and therefore may be of questionable value for rebuilding purposes ..... but geez ... this is ridiculuous ...... tired of my whining? Who has any ideas?
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78 300d 158k driver 80 300d 200k fixer 80 300d parts car 98 Cherokee 240k " I know for certain that someday while parking or un-parking my Jeep Cherokee, I'm gonna' either pull the headlight switch right outa' its dashboard OR stomp its hood release lever clean offa' the kick panel. It's just a matter of which will happen first." ![]() |
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