Master was cylinder replaced today under warranty and the pedal fade problem has gone away, but the braking has gotten worse. The braking is gradual no matter how hard I press the brakes. I cannot hard brake. Also, after 20 miles of driving the check engine light came on. Bringing it back tomorrow.
Does the brake pedal feel hard to push? I'll bet they screwed up the vacuum hose going from the engine to the brake power booster. If that's the case, you have no power assist to the brakes - and I wouldn't drive the vehicle in this condition. Make them send a flatbed. You can test the booster yourself very easily:
1: engine off, transmission in Park, parking brake set normally.
2: start the engine and let it idle for a few seconds to a minute. Doesn't need to be long - just enough to reach a smooth/steady idle. Turn the engine back off.
3: push on the brake pedal slowly until it's pretty firm - taking a good bit of force. Note how far it moved.
4: let the pedal up.
5: push on it again until it feels about as firm as step 2. Hold it there... did it move less than step 3? If so, good. If not... odds are the booster isn't doing it's job.
6: release it again.
7: repeat steps 5 & 6 a few times. Each time the pedal should move less before the force gets high.... each time you push the pedal you are using up some of the "trapped" engine vacuum in the booster so the booster provides less and less assist. Eventually it'll stop helping you completely - after 2 to 5 applications of the brake pedal typically.
8: push the pedal down and hold it with a fair bit of force.
9: while holding the pedal down, start the engine again. The brake pedal should sink quite a bit towards the floor once the engine starts: with the engine providing vacuum again, the booster starts functioning again.
Steps 7 and 9 are the main things to observe; if either doesn't seem to match your car I'd NOT drive the car and make the dealer flatbed it. They screwed up the power braking assist.
The vacuum hose that I'm theorizing about is easy to eyeball: open open the hood and look in the back/right corner (as you face the engine bay from in front of the car). You'll see a white plastic reservoir tank, below this is the brake master cylinder - a silver metal thing. It bolts to a big round black piece - that's the power booster. There should be a fairly large rubber hose plugged into the front of the booster; this hose eventually
plugs into the engine to collect engine vacuum. See if the hose looks like it's connected to the booster. Oh, if this hose is leaking it'll affect some of the engine's air-fuel calculations enough to trigger the check-engine light.
There is also a free play adjustment in the brake pedal and in the metal rod/pins between the pedal, booster, and master cylinder. If they didn't make this adjustment, the brake pedal will travel down more than usual before you get any braking action... and the pedal will bottom out against the carpet before fully applying the brakes. This too is an installation error on their part... and another reason to not drive the car and have them flatbed it. If this is your problem, your car will pass the booster test I described and that vacuum hose will be properly installed.
mike c.