if you are talking about brake as in like fourwheeler brakes or car brakes the rubber part would be called the brake pad
a block
There is a rubber piece missing near your brake pedal. My friend had the same problem and his mechanic just put a small rubber piece there. Not exactly sure what it's called..
You can not use rubber fuel lines to replace the current brake lines due to the high operating pressure. You will need to replace them with brake lines, the rubber brake lines has a different construction to hold the pressure and not getting eaten away by the brake fluid, brake lines can hold over 2000psi when the pedal is heavily applied
No, brake fluid is damaging to the rubber of a tire.
The part of the car that turns on the brake lights when you apply pressure to the brake pedal is called the brake switch. Releasing pressure from the pedal causes the brake switch to break its electrical contact, turning off the lights.
No. Brake fluid is not a petroleum product. Power steering fluid is. Petroleum product will swell and ruin rubber part's brake system is full of rubber parts. You will destroy your brake system using power steering fluid.
The rubber that comes from oil is called 'synthetic rubber'. The rubber that comes from trees is called 'natural rubber'.
No.
Because rubber is harder to brake than most materials out there and it doesnt attrack electricity
It would be the rubber pad that sits on your brake pedal. Unless they were referring to brake pads, which are the pads which enables your vehicle to stop by pressing the brake pedal.
brake light switch at the top off your brake pedal the little rubber bumber is worn out or the switch is out.... very easy fix
No.