This is a bit of a mystery at the moment so I thought there might be some valuable tips out there.
The brake master cylinder emptied itself into the footwell and I therefore lost the brakes. I felt the best move was to replace it. Installed the new one, bled the brakes, all back to normal.
A week later its done it again although this time there is no brake fluid in the footwell. Theres no brake fliud on the garage floor either and I still have no brakes.
My friend bought a plus2. Driving back he lost his brakes. No fluid in the resovoir. We filled it up, bled the brakes, but no brakes. It was all ending up in the servo.
Hi, I’m the ‘friend who lost his brakes’ that berni29 mentioned. All the fluid from the reservoir ended up in the servo. Sadly the Girling servo used on the Plus Two (Girling MkII B 7") is no longer available. The options are - (i) Buy the Lockheed replacement at ?165, discard the original mounting bracket and bolt it face down onto the inner wing or (ii) get the original reconditioned. I’ve had quotes for this ranging from ?200 to ?330 incl vat. The overhaul kit costs ?120 plus vat. Is your car a late model?
If you can find cheaper prices do let us know.
Best of luck,
Simon
I am in the process of rebuilding my servo (Mk2 A) it is not that difficult to do . Just patience and cleanliness are esential . Rebuild kit was ?45 (I think) . I do have a spare Mk2 B I could sell to you . It was recon when I bought it but do not know now as been in storage a while . Drop me an email if interested .
Try Norton Brake Services, he sells very affordable rebuild kit and will also rebuild your old servo for a realistic price.
Carl
P.s. If you leave out the little ball bearing when you rebuild your servo the brake pedal pushes back when you try to brake… I discovered this the hard way many years ago.
I have at least one NOS servo rebuild kit (SP 2625/4 includes diaphram) and lots of other +2 parts that I would like to sell since I don’t think I will ever get another one. Email me for a complete list.
Thanks for all your advice and help much appreciated.
I contacted various people for either a new, reconditioned or overhaul mine, servo.
Norton Brakes stood out by a mile. Very helpful and happy to fit in with my time frame and budget. I am quite satisfied that there isnt a cheap solution to a servo needing repair. Frankly, from a safety perspective there probably shouldnt be.