


According to Cardone, most of these are dual diaphragm, and have various diaphragm sizes. I have learned that a lot of 2008+ Fords, including the 2008 Explorer Sport Trac, were equipped with these boosters. I think in some cases they were also used as a means of early AEB actuation. These were primarily used on advanced ABS systems prior to the development of fully electronic stability control. In addition to being able to be actuated by the pedal rod, the vacuum booster also has a small electric solenoid valve that vents atmospheric pressure to the booster when the solenoid is energized, allowing it to engage with no pedal input whatsoever.

So yet another option I have come across is the existence of “active” brake vacuum boosters.
#IBOOSTER BRAKE INSTALL#
Just a normal install plus maybe three or so wires. Plus the Hydromax is not much more difficult to install than a normal hydroboost. Run it off the PS pump when the engine is running, and use the motor for toad and emergency braking. If the electric motor is actually reliable enough to use for a good amount of time, it might be a best of both worlds scenario. But if you want speed control on the JL EHPS, you'd have to set up an arduino or something to simulate the CAN bus signals.īut one thing I am still considering as a possibility is the Hydromax unit. A couple of tees, a pair of check valves, power, ground, and turn-on wiring and it would be done. Plumbing and doing the basic wiring would be super easy. I also looked at the possibility of using a JL EHPS in parallel with a factory CBR pump to boost power steering flow at idle and maybe also run a hydroboost with the engine off. That ZF unit apparently is the brain for the entire traction control system, not just the brakes. Yeah the more I looked into it the worse it gets.
