TDBrown
Full Access Member
Does altitude somehow effect braking performance? A few years ago (during COVID), my wife and I drove the Raptor off-road across the country on the Transamerica Trail. The trail took us up over Engineer Summit (?) which, as I recall, was over 13,000 ft elevation. When we started down the back side of it, going into Silverton, CO, we lost almost all braking. Like we'd be going 5 mph and it would take forever to get it to stop. It was a scary situation with me pumping and standing on the brakes and getting almost no bite. When we dropped elevation, the brakes started working fine again.
We checked everything I new to check and all looked fine. We chalked it up to freak occurrence. The next day we drove up over Imogene Pass and the exact same thing happened. At the top I could stand on the brakes and get almost no braking. We limped down the mountain. As soon as we got to a lower elevation, the brakes worked fine again.
I ran all this past my auto shop and all they could think to do was change the brake fluid. It has bothered me all these years, so I thought I'd ask the forum. Any idea what would cause something like this? And has changing brake fluid truly solved the problem?
We checked everything I new to check and all looked fine. We chalked it up to freak occurrence. The next day we drove up over Imogene Pass and the exact same thing happened. At the top I could stand on the brakes and get almost no braking. We limped down the mountain. As soon as we got to a lower elevation, the brakes worked fine again.
I ran all this past my auto shop and all they could think to do was change the brake fluid. It has bothered me all these years, so I thought I'd ask the forum. Any idea what would cause something like this? And has changing brake fluid truly solved the problem?