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Foreign car junk yards...check for accumulators


Barney Eaton

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Does anyone on the forum have Foreign car junk yards in their area?

I just checked with SAAB parts department and the accumulator number used on SAAB's is 4002267 (I think Padgett posted a number last week but I can't find it) A new part list for just under $400. But if GM stops stocking them we need to find another source.

I have been told that Jaguar and Mercedes also used the Teves system.

So if you are junking, look at some cars and try to verify the size of their accumulator. Depending on the price, you might pick up a used one and try it.

Secondly, I am thinking of ways we could test accumulators. If any of you have a background in hydraulics, maybe we could make a hand pump with gage and rig up at test fixture. I'm thinking it would need to measure pressure and have a way of measuring how much fluid goes into the accumulator with a certain amount of pressure. Any thoughts?

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Padgetts Post from the 20th:

padgett

Forum Fanatic

Reged: 06/02/01

Posts: 5613

Loc: Orlando, Florida, occasionaly Re: more * Teves * brake system questions please.... [Re: inthespot]

#460021 - 04/20/07 09:42 AM Edit Reply Quote Quick Reply

Still listed as available from GMPartsDirect.com

GM PART # 25528382

CATEGORY: All

PACK QTY: 1

CORE CHARGE: $0.00

GM LIST: $201.62

OUR PRICE: $104.84

--------------------

Web home www.6007.us

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Junk yards are actually not a very good source. A couple of weeks ago I went to several yards and picked up 9 accumulators. I then tested them one at a time on my car and checked for the number of pumps it took for the red light to come on. Out of the 9 I had one that took 4 pumps which would be average since a new accumulator takes about 7. I had one that came on in three pumps and all the rest came on in two or less. I saved the 4 pump and the 3 pump and threw the rest away.

I then took my sawzall and cut one in half. It was just a steel housing with a rubber bladder inside. Even on the accumulator that was totally out of nitrogen I could not push a rod into the bottom hole so there must have been a little pressure in there. After I cut one open I could then push the bladder into the housing.

If a person did have some sort of pump that went to 2600 pounds you could measure the amount of fluid that goes in and compare it to a new one. The more fluid the accumulator takes the worse it is so you would first have to know how much a new one holds.

One tip if you do go to junk yards, if there is a white label on the accumulator it is a replacement and the odds of it being good are better than an original one although a while back I did get one with the white label on it and it was no good.

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Guest mongeonman

I went to a foreign junk yard where they had bmw,jag,volvo,mercedes,ect and they looked for an accumulator like the one in the reatta and they said that the ones they had found were much bigger,and did not fit the reatta.I think the easiest way to test accumulators would be to buy a gage like the one they show in the FSM and test it like they say ,it would cost much less than building an hydraulis system.

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Thanks for the picture, can you tell if the accumulator screws into the fitting and is the threads on the accumulator the same as the Reatta? Also is the Reatta and Mercedes accumulators the same size (any chance of a side by side picture)?

If they are the same, what years Mercedes and was it standard suspension on what model?

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Watch out for "PowerMaster"s - was a GM electrohydraulic boost (no ABS) system that used a similar accumulator but was half the pressure.

Sounds like we need a way to drill/tap/install a fitting and find a way to charge to 700 psi (preferably with Nitrogen). Will require a supply of ded accumulators so it might be a good idea to save. I suspect most could be just recharged.

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I was just at a u-pick yard and saw 6 w/o looking to hard. What cars should I be looking at and how do they come off? Counterclockwise, but by hand or do I use a tool or oil filter wrench? I will grab them and send to whoever wants to do the testing. I did notice that the ones I looked at in the yard does not have a made in Germany [white] sticker like mine does. Does that mean mine has been replaced? My pressure sensor also has a white sticker.

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Maybe someone shoud contact Prior Remanufacting and see where they source theirs from or if they are up for supplying the accumulator on its own. I would be shocked if GM's discontinuance of the part will mean much of anything in the long term useability of the Teves system.

I for one am not worried in the slightest about finding an accumulator at some future date.

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I also thought of recharging the accumulators but not sure how it would be done. Here are some picture of an accumulator cut in half.

I am guessing the factory pressurized the accumulator from the top and the welded it shut.

Pix 1 shows the bladder in the bottom half.

Pix 2 shows the top.

It looks like inside the hex there might be a slug inserted and then spot welded as shown in pix 3.

In pix 3 you can see a tiny hole with a blue ring around it from being very hot.

The metal piece on top with the hex is also welded to the housing.

accum1.jpgaccum2.jpgaccum3.jpg

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  • 2 weeks later...
Guest tempest68

I would like to know if anyone has successfully re-engineered the braking system using OEM GM parts in such a was as to eliminate the use of the accumulator. If I remember correctly, the '91 did not use the same setup as the '88-'90s. Is it a moderate project or just a complete nightmare to consider converting to the '91 style system?

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The TEVES has an ABS module in the trunk. For the 91 Delco unit, it uses part of the ECM to control the ABS which would mean integrating your ECM software into the ABS-capable ECM, a new wiring harness, and whatever other components are rquired.

What many have done is to convert to a Riviera style non-ABS poer brake system. That just requires plumbing.

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There is an '89 Riv. in the local u-pick yard. When you say plumbing what parts do I need exactly? This Riv does not have the Teves brake system. Also if anyone out there has the long console piece from a Riv. with the burled wood look I would be interested in talking to you. I have all the other parts.

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Guest tempest68

Thanks Padgett for the info. I did not realize the Riv's were different. My wife and I both dislike ABS systems in the winter-time here in the Northeast. On a patch of ice the ABS on any of our cars seems to prolong the stopping times instead of reducing it. I'm sure certain situations ABS is great, but snow and ice conditions are not one of them.

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Guest F14CRAZY

Ah yes, the Rivi vacuum powered system. We go for those because Teves was optional on the Rivi, but standard on Reattas

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  • 4 months later...

While wandering around the yards here, I noted that the Caddy Seville's used an Ate ABS system that seems to incorporate our accumulators. Can't find a part number for it though. I guess we gave up on trying to find a way to re-pressurize or test them other than put them on the car and hope for the best.

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Guest imported_REATAMANZ

Barney,

GM first used accumulators in the mid to late 80's. They used a US company that bought them from a German company. Teves had to supply the ABS system to other platforms probably in Europe. The supplier that GM bought from was called Intergral Hydraulic in Enfield Ct. If someome like yourself would contact them, they maybe able and willing to give you who their supplier in Germany was. Telephone number is 860-745-7932 our contact was a man named Godried Kusters. GM part we bought was 18015032--this part has nothing to do with Reattas.

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You all with the forgien car yards, I'm looking for some parts for my 1987 BMW 325i. Body parts from an 84-87 needed are as followes:

at least left front fender, be nice to have both

hood

grille

front METAL valence

front/rear bumper shocks

rear bumper

Engine parts from 87 3__i series, excluding the 318i

Throttle body

Idle Air Control Valve

Motronic ECM

Front engine bay wiring harness. the one for the headlights ans junk

and I need the power sunroof motor/transmission.

Let me know....

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