dirty e-brake pedal????

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shomtx95

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Help??? I think. I was just wondering if anyone else has ever had this problem, my e-brake pedal has some sort of black goo all over it. It almost looks like tar but not as thick. It has severly staind my carpet and is very hard to clean. I can remember getting some parts off of a SLO taurus one time and it had the same stuff on the pedal, it was all over my arm. Any replies would be greatly appreciated. Also if anyone has had this problem, what did you use to clean it??
 

HoustinoJillian

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its a rubber pad on the ebrake, some taurii (including yours, and my old 89) had this happen. the rubber is literally devulcanizing, or returning from hard state to goo. i don't think theres much to clean it other than rags to wipe it off and try to keep it from getting on the carpet.
 

luigisho

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x2. It's a stop for the pedal when it pops back up. My GenI had it break down and make a mess. Use whatever you think is best for tar clean up.
 

mrecoolgar

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Just redo it like this.
I2002-04-21002.jpg
 

Storm-Chaser

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Two things.

First, check the emergency brake switch after a long drive. A Thunderbird I did electrical work on had this problem, and in trouble-shooting an eletrical short that resulted from harness-hacking (ie. a ****-poorly installed remote start system), I found that the emergency brake switch was generating heat. It is excess heat that causes the rubber pad to melt (devulcanize).

Whether the heat that was being generated was enough to cause the pad to devulcanize - or the direct metal-to-metal contact between the emergency brake pedal and switch that occurred after the pad melted was providing a short-to-ground path - I don't know.

Second, while Kevin has come-up with an innovative way to replace the pad (which you cannot buy from F***) - I personally would not use a setup that uses a metal-to-metal contact between the switch and stop, or anything that incorporates a rounded head. The intent of the rubber pad is to absorb the blunt-force when the emergency brake abruptly retracts. Also, using a rounded-head bolt/screw will cause lateral deflection of the switch and eventually break one of the two mounting-points.

If you will look at the pad on a good emergency brake assembly, you will see how the small steel button on the emergency brake switch creates an indentation into the rubber pad, and how the design below would cause/place a lateral-load on that small plastic switch.


Kevin - nice job restoring the emergency brake assembly. Did you bead-blast or sand blast it? Paint or powder-cost it? It looks really nice.


Just redo it like this.
I2002-04-21002.jpg


:burnout:
 
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mrecoolgar

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I don't remember, it's been 7 years.
I think I just sanded everything smooth.
Then used Eastwoods Spray Gray.
Then used a beveled bytle washer retained by a stainless 8-32.
Thanks for the usage tips.
 

bolsterboy

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OH MAH GOD, I had no idea this was a Taurus wide thing, i thought the goo on my e-brake was put there by the farmer last owner of my car, but i could never figure out why.
 

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