Make sure master cylinder is full Have assistant step on brake pedal Walk around vehicle and look to see if any wheel is wet (from leaking wheel cylinder) See if any brake line is leaking Make sure rear brakes are adjusted properly (if drum brakes) Check to make sure caliper slides are not frozen (not allowing disc brakes to self-adjust)
Cones, hemispheres, and cylinders have.
Mine was doing the same thing for a long time and we couldn't figure it out. We found out the wheel cylinders were bad. Maybe check into that... Hope it works..
It can be either, though often it is the bottom.
well if you have no brakes in the back of youre jeep the best thoing to do is put new brakes on it brakes do wear down after a while and if no shop can fugure it out then i would go to a better shop if you have to go to dealer because if they cant figure out what is wrong with youre brake they have no bussness being a mechanic
P=pgh, remeber that g=9.8 , so ignoring the atmosheric pressure you would just multiply 9.8x4 and you would get 39.2KPa ... i'm not that good with physics so just analyze what is given to you and figure out if the answer is correct or not. Hope I helped :)
The base is the bottom of the figure and the height is how tall the figure is.
A cone/cylinder
Final cost
"To get to the bottom of" a mystery means to solve it. Getting to the bottom of something means to figure out the reason or explanation for it.
Measure the height of the pipe, in inches. Then the pressure at the bottom is approx 14.7 + 0.036*H PSI.
Only if you can figure a way to make the brakes work.
Question what exactly is? Figure out can't it I what from saying are you.