NickJ67
Mechanical
- Nov 13, 2009
- 86
I was recently working on a '96 Audi A6 Avant 2WD, ABS equipped. This has in-line restriction orifices located in each rear brake line where the caliper hose meets the hard lines. Being made from aluminium and located very much in the splash zone, these dissolve away quietly and eventually fail catastrophically - as in this case. They are also small and well hidden, so unless you know to look out for them, you'll not find the fault until the pedal hits the floor. Roads have been very heavily salted this winter which won't have helped matters. Perhaps surprisingly, replacements are also aluminium.
Question is, what function do they have? According to Audi they are only fitted to ABS equipped Avants (station wagon). The saloons don't have them. They can't have any true load proportioning action and the ABS effectively does this anyway. As far as I can work out, all they can do is delay the response of the rear brakes - maybe giving a damping effect under ABS deployment conditions?
Seems strange that the saloon, which is very close mechanically (I imagine spring and damper ratings are different, but other wise the same) is not thought to need them.
The car is currently running without them (on back order from Germany!) and both braking and ABS action seem normal. I'd prefer not to refit these parts (in aluminium at least), but would like to know what effect they are supposed to have before making a final decision.
Picture shows the opposite side, which hadn't yet failed - it's buried under the mud in that clip and looks just like the normal (plated steel) hose end.
It was pulled off using two fingers only, becoming this....
and the orifice looks like this - approx. 0.6mm
Another worrying thing is that although the car has diagonal split line dual circuit, only one circuit was punctured, and the reservoir was not empty - this single fault caused total hydraulic failure. Surely this should not be the case?
If you happen to have one of these cars I'd suggest checking these parts out as a matter of urgency.
Regards
Nick
Question is, what function do they have? According to Audi they are only fitted to ABS equipped Avants (station wagon). The saloons don't have them. They can't have any true load proportioning action and the ABS effectively does this anyway. As far as I can work out, all they can do is delay the response of the rear brakes - maybe giving a damping effect under ABS deployment conditions?
Seems strange that the saloon, which is very close mechanically (I imagine spring and damper ratings are different, but other wise the same) is not thought to need them.
The car is currently running without them (on back order from Germany!) and both braking and ABS action seem normal. I'd prefer not to refit these parts (in aluminium at least), but would like to know what effect they are supposed to have before making a final decision.
Picture shows the opposite side, which hadn't yet failed - it's buried under the mud in that clip and looks just like the normal (plated steel) hose end.

It was pulled off using two fingers only, becoming this....

and the orifice looks like this - approx. 0.6mm

Another worrying thing is that although the car has diagonal split line dual circuit, only one circuit was punctured, and the reservoir was not empty - this single fault caused total hydraulic failure. Surely this should not be the case?
If you happen to have one of these cars I'd suggest checking these parts out as a matter of urgency.
Regards
Nick