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dlindzey
I think it is a brake warning light and from what I have read it subserves two functions. If still on after the engine starts either parking brake is on or you have brake failure. In my case parking brake is not on and brakes seem to work ok. It came on a few months ago and then went off and I thought might be a short so I have just not used the parking brake for months. Today it is on again and won't go off.

There is not much working space around the parking brake so I never did find the little button that is activated/deactivated for the parking brake.

Anyone know what I am talking about or have any suggestions for trouble shooting the matter? TIA dll-----I forgot 1971 model
dtmehall
The parking brake function, using the flasher relay, causes the light to blink. The parking brake switch is not robust, but usually fails in the open position. If there is a short near the switch, the light would flash.
fiacra
Check the brake fluid reservoir to make sure that you are not losing brake fluid and that there is no fluid on the floor around the pedal cluster. My brakes were working fine too, but the MC was failing/leaking and was on the way out. You should also check for leaks in other areas.
jim_hoyland
FYI- The switch for the e-Brake is identical to your door switches…. Just replaced mine… smile.gif
dtmehall
jim_hoyland

how did you do that? did you take the seat out?
jim_hoyland
QUOTE(dtmehall @ Dec 4 2024, 05:29 PM) *

jim_hoyland

how did you do that? did you take the seat out?

We got the seat out of the way so there was access to that Philips head screw
Just like the door switches, we had to finesse it out; it doesn’t pull straight up IIRC
brant
The switch for the parking brake can fail
It is in the interior right below the handle that turns it offf

The other likely failure is the master cylinder

The re-set button for that switch is not on the brakes but is on the master cylinder underneath the foot pedal area. For visibility reasons. Pull the front pan that covers the steering rack. (4 bolts) and you will see it on the mc. 2nd time you won’t have to pull the pan
Ishley
Pull the seat all the way forward. On the track on the opposite side of the handle… reach under the seat feeling along the track. There is a small metal button thing that has to be push up towards the seat bottom… while you push forward on the seat with your other hand. Careful it’s easy to get your fingers pinched. You’ll know when it’s released. The seat will then slide forward off the track and you can remove it.

The parking brake light switch is in the crossmember at the bottom of the brake when it’s in the down position. When the handle is up the switch is closed and the ground is fed back to the circuit and the light illuminates. You should be able to push the switch with your finger. It might be that the brake handle is not contacting it properly or it could be a bad switch. There is a little screw you take out… and you can work the switch out.
Spoke
The MC warning switch and ebrake switch are in parallel. Either one could be on.

For the ebrake switch, for me it's easier just to remove the seat to gain access. Pull the switch out and pull the wire. See if the light goes out. If not, look at the MC:

For the MC warning switch, go under the car, remove the protection pan and disconnect the wire(s) and see if the light goes off.
StarBear
QUOTE(jim_hoyland @ Dec 4 2024, 08:25 PM) *

FYI- The switch for the e-Brake is identical to your door switches…. Just replaced mine… smile.gif

Of course, unless it’s not. beer.gif headbang.gif av-943.gif
My somewhat early 74 1.8 has a parking brake switch (original) like a VW, with a 2mm prong rather than the door switch 3 (or4?) mm prong. The wire female end could be changed but I just went and got a few of the VW ones.
FlacaProductions
The switch is activated/pressed on by the circled part in this pic.
Click to view attachment
Ishley
70-72 have the older style parking brake handle which has a Pivot in the middle to make it easier to get in and out of the car. The part that triggers the parking brake look different. I modified mine with an adjustable screw that triggers the switch.
FlacaProductions
ahhh, yes -that pic I posted is for later cars - apologies. I now see we're dealing with a 71.
dlindzey
QUOTE(brant @ Dec 4 2024, 07:59 PM) *

The switch for the parking brake can fail
It is in the interior right below the handle that turns it offf

The other likely failure is the master cylinder

The re-set button for that switch is not on the brakes but is on the master cylinder underneath the foot pedal area. For visibility reasons. Pull the front pan that covers the steering rack. (4 bolts) and you will see it on the mc. 2nd time you won’t have to pull the pan



My MC is in the frunk on top of the wall that seperates cockpit from frunk so not sure about the location that you are referenceing. Mine is 1971 if it matters. It also does not have a switch on it which I have heard referenced at times.
brant
Isn’t the reservoir in the front trunk?
Not the MC

The MC is immediately in front of the brake pedal

It can only be accessed from below the car

Jack the front end up and take the suspension pan off
4 bolts
Then you will see the master cylinder

I think they all have a failure mode switch
(Not a fluid level switch)

Early car might be single pole switch


emerygt350
You can get at the mc switch by just removing or even just turning the driver side wheel.
brant
QUOTE(emerygt350 @ Dec 5 2024, 04:53 PM) *

You can get at the mc switch by just removing or even just turning the driver side wheel.



True but harder if you have never seen it even once
Let alone looking in the wrong place

Like I said above. The 2nd time you won’t need to remove the pan because you then know what your looking for
brant
The next job step becomes more difficult

You need to remove the pedal board and take the rubber boot off of the MC
To see if the MC has failed and it’s wet under that boot
dlindzey
thank you everybody for the advice and been there done that information. Let me update you and ask some further questions

I never had the blinking brake light failure indicator issue. My warning light just stays on post start up.

I was able to get the seat out and then was able to get the switch out. It only has one contact for wiring and has a brown wire with a white stripe. It seems functional so I reinstalled it and the brake warning light remains on. Many of the replacement parts have two contacts for the switch so not sure what to think of that. I ordered one from auto atlanta that seems to have just one contact so I will see if that corrects the problem but I am thinking it is something else.

Is there any explanation other than failing master cylinder? Fuses, shorts any well know alternative points of failures.

I have turned my tire and can see parts of the master cyclinder but can't get at it to reset a switch or see if it is leaking. Is the plate that has been referenced underneath the car so I need jackstands or a lift to further trouble shoot? Any further recommendations for those that have been in this situation?
brant
QUOTE(dlindzey @ Dec 6 2024, 08:22 AM) *

thank you everybody for the advice and been there done that information. Let me update you and ask some further questions

I never had the blinking brake light failure indicator issue. My warning light just stays on post start up.

I was able to get the seat out and then was able to get the switch out. It only has one contact for wiring and has a brown wire with a white stripe. It seems functional so I reinstalled it and the brake warning light remains on. Many of the replacement parts have two contacts for the switch so not sure what to think of that. I ordered one from auto atlanta that seems to have just one contact so I will see if that corrects the problem but I am thinking it is something else.

Is there any explanation other than failing master cylinder? Fuses, shorts any well know alternative points of failures.

I have turned my tire and can see parts of the master cyclinder but can't get at it to reset a switch or see if it is leaking. Is the plate that has been referenced underneath the car so I need jackstands or a lift to further trouble shoot? Any further recommendations for those that have been in this situation?




so there has to be a reason the light came on
I don't actually know if blinking, solid means anything different. doubt it... its a very simplistic system. I don't have an early car (your 71)

that light is turned on by the parking brake...and by a safety switch on the MC to warn you of brake failure..... its not something to ignore, and you could loose the majority of your braking on the next drive... thus the warning light. the parking brake switch is the easy one to access... rule that out first. just unplug it and see if the light goes out... it could be a bad switch... mostly they do not fail... the brake handle just misses the plunger and doesn't trip the switch... easy to rule out.. easy to check...
and then you move on the the hydraulic brake circuit next.


new cars have warning lights to tell you your fluid is low... a floating switch in the reservoir... similar to a toilet.

914 never had that.
the switch on the MC is to tell you the piston over extended triggering a failure switch to turn the light on. A sealed hydraulic system will not trigger that light.

meaning if this is what is triggering your light... it was down on fluid or leaking enough to allow the MC piston to over extend.

was your system out of fluid?
do you have a drip on the floor or inside of a wheel? (indicating a leaking caliper... make sure to check all 4 calipers for wetness)
did you recently bleed your brakes and have the closed system open for this service?


you really should bleed your brakes every other year or more
sitting parked is the worse thing for your brake system
the brake fluid absorbs water... then starts to rust inside the calipers, MC, full system

thus bleeding every other year to get the water out.


you could have a shorted wire.
I'm assuming the single pole sensor on early MC's is a grounding wire. the circuit grounds when the switch is triggered and turns the light on.

the real test would be that on both of the hand brake switch and MC switch you would test for a short by pulling the wires off of the switch and seeing if the light goes off when you break the circuit. dash light stays on when both are unplugged... means its getting a ground signal somewhere else from a broken wire short.


beyond a shorted wire.
the much more likely scenario is that you have not bled the brakes frequently enough to keep the water out of the system... the car then sat a few years.. pitted the MC piston or bore.... then fluid leaked past the rubber piston boot inside of the MC... thus the system was no longer a sealed system... the piston over extended and triggered the safety switch... turning your light on.


do you know when the brakes were last bled.
or the MC last replaced?

if over 10 years then you very likely have a bad MC unless the vehicle is getting the brakes bled regularly.

you will be able to tell with a few simple tests.

do you work on your own cars? tools?
no shame to use a mechanic
but with the purchase of some tools, and beer for your mechanic friend to come over and help you this is very doable and something you can learn.

you do need jack stands, and a jack.
you will need some hand wrenches, and allen socket wrenches

if the MC has actually failed the leaking fluid will be inside the rubber seal on the rear (as installed) of the MC where the brake pedal plunging rod enters the MC (under the brake pedal from the inside cockpit of the vehicle.)

if it has leaked... it will destroy your pedal bushings and any paint on the pedals and floorboard area below the MC

taking the pedal board off and potentially the pedal cluster is not a fun job as it is under the dash... but also not the most difficult job either.

if the brake fluid has gotten on any painted surface it will begin to rust soon.
very likely some of the rusted front floor pan cars you see that need major work, started the rust in the pedal area from a leaking MC that no one addressed in time.

the stock bushings in the pedal cluster are nylon. they swell and make the pedals sticky pretty soon after they get wet from brake fluid. most rebuilt pedal clusters will use brass bushings as a non factory upgrade that is more durable.

the pedal board is a bit tricky to remove
only 2 allen bolts... but takes a bit of wiggling to get out

since your car is early you likely wouldn't of originally had a center console.
that makes getting the pedal board out much easier.


but to diagnose your problem
you need to check for a shorting ground wire.

you need to put the car on front jack stands... remove the suspension pan... and test the wire on the MC switch... you can reset the safety switch with the reset button.

if the brake circuit is still sealed... not leaking any where then resetting the safety switch will solve your problem. but doesn't explain how it got tripped or turned on it the first place. most likely it was tripped/turned on by a MC leaking.

they don't leak to the underside where the suspension pan and switch are at.
they leak on the interior side where the brake pedal plunging rod enters the rubber boot at the brake pedal... (under the pedal board)

so thus the reason for tearing the interior apart and removing the MC boot at the pedal cluster to see if there is any wetness from fluid leak.

do you have a friend or neighbor you can get help from?
or schedule a work party on a weekend with other 914 guys in your area....
buy pizza and beer and they will help show you

most importantly... buy a haynes manual
it will teach you a lot.

if all of this is over whelming... take the car to a porsche shop that knows older porsches....


Replacing the MC if it is leaking is an whole 2nd job....
its annoying and not easy. involves often pulling the fuel tank and fighting the soft brake lines for a few hours that feed the replacement MC

most go to 19 mm when they do have to replace.
stock was 17mm but no longer available.
and as I said... depending on damage done to paint
potentially you are addressing the peeled paint in the pedal area damaged by leaking fluid... and rebuilding your pedal cluster at the same time again as a result of damage by leaking fluid....


see why you should bleed your brakes annually or every other year?

brant
fiacra
That was a nice write-up Brant. That is exactly how my MC failed. The car had limited use before I bought it, and the MC failed within the first few miles of driving it. The light came on and I pulled the pedal board and immediately found the leak. I didn't even bother checking the parking brake first. A malfunctioning parking brake switch is not inherently dangerous, a failing MC is, so why would your diagnostic flow chart start at the switch? It's on the flow chart for sure, just not the top of the chart. At that point I did still have functioning brakes and the only sign of failure was the light. I've since figured out that in my car (1975) the light blinks when the parking brake is on, and it stays on when the MC fails. Not sure about an early car.

If the MC has failed then the car is dead in the water until it is replaced and the rest of the system is checked. Replacing the MC is one of the most unpleasant jobs I've done on my car, and because the first MC I got was defective I had to do it twice. If you do not have a safe place to work, the right tools, and confidence in your mechanical abilities you should take it to a shop. It will be expensive at a shop, but probably less expensive than the consequences of brake failure. If your soft lines are more than 10 years old I would just replace them now as well. They probably will look fine on the outside, but will be swollen on the inside. Inspect your wheel calipers and consider sending them off to PMB for restoration. Check (and replace if needed) your rotors and front wheel bearings now. You have to bleed the system, and that is not an easy job as well, so now is the time to take care of any other problems that require you to open the system. I don't know why it is so hard on these cars to get all the air out of the system, but I needed three quarts of brake fluid and a pressure bleeder to get it done. That is just my experience, others have found it to be easier. I did also replace the lines and hoses from the reservoir. I didn't fully pull the tank to do that, but I did need to move it in order to feed those lines through. Don't forget a new grommet for the lines and a new washer for the banjo fitting at the MC. Get an extra rubber plug in case you tear one. It's cheap insurance against a common problem that will hold you up if it happens. As I said, my first MC (from a well known World vendor) was defective. The second time around I got an Ate MC. Twice the cost, but three times the peace of mind.

Here's a link to Ian's video about replacing an MC. I'm not dissing the source for his MC, but mine was defective and that led to a lot of extra work (and cost) for me. I'd go with the Ate MC if you can. My problem was likely an anomaly, but we are talking about brakes. No need to take chances.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N6ZHK5f_9bE
dlindzey
thank you gentlemen, I would assume that everything is 50 years old so it looks like trailer to porsche shop as it is 100 miles away and see what happens and agree brake job while it is apart but i want to get at that MC and see if it is leaking and hit the reset button first if I can
Literati914
Does your "fasten Seat Belts" light work as it should? .. it is tied in to the E-brake switch if I'm not mistaken. At least on the '72 model (my harness has some attributes of the '71 apparently), these two wires come together at the back of the combo gauge and run thru a diode just before the bulb. (there is a second diode just before the alternator bulb too btw).
dlindzey
QUOTE(Literati914 @ Dec 7 2024, 02:45 PM) *

Does your "fasten Seat Belts" light work as it should? .. it is tied in to the E-brake switch if I'm not mistaken. At least on the '72 model (my harness has some attributes of the '71 apparently), these two wires come together at the back of the combo gauge and run thru a diode just before the bulb. (there is a second diode just before the alternator bulb too btw).



I don't think that I have a seat belt warning mechanism
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