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Re: PDWA

To: triumphs@autox.team.net
Subject: Re: PDWA
From: ZoboHerald@aol.com
Date: Thu, 27 Jun 2002 15:56:46 -0400
In a message dated Thu, 27 Jun 2002 2:35:09 PM Eastern Standard Time, 
ptegler@gouldfo.com writes:

> The VTR site has it right.   I once drove a Spit for 130 miles
> with no back brakes. No fluid loss either (other than the orig
> when the line broke)  So I'm inclined to believe what I always
> have... it seals it off.

In response to the note from "Woods, Ed":
 
> I thought that it was the consensus of the List that the PDWA did not shut
> off the offending part of the braking system when tripped; that it is only a
> device to give an electrical warning. Then I found the following on the VTR
> website.
> 
> What gives??
> 
> "Front or Rear brakes bled, but no luck at other end 
>          Your Pressure Differential Warning Actuator (PDWA) may be tripped.
> This would close off either the front or back hydraulic circuit and leave
> the other
>          functional...."

I can only say that the VTR site is WRONG in this instance. (I'll have to take 
a look at that and see about getting it changed.) Various Triumph Official 
Workshop Manuals are quite clear in their explanation of the PDWA as just that: 
a pressure differential WARNING ACTUATOR. It turns on the dash warning light 
when tripped; nothing more.

In the Girling dual-circuit master cylinders, it is a "tipping valve" that 
blocks off the leaky side of the system.

--Andy Mace

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