Hello all.
Brake issue resolved. First are thank you to all who replied with suggestions. 
Turned out to be the axle nut was too tight causing binding on one of the 
caliper slides. A 1/4 turn loosening the wheel solved it.
Thanks again everyone.

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________________________________
From: KRnet <[email protected]> on behalf of Jeff Scott via KRnet 
<[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, July 2, 2025 9:15:50 PM
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Cc: Jeff Scott <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: KRnet> Brakes

Mark,

I often times find braking issues where you get a hard pedal, but little brake 
action when they are constructed using 1/4" nylaflow tubing for the brake 
lines.  With a longer run to the right brake, you tend to lose more of your 
braking authority to wall expansion (stretching) of the 1/4" plastic.  The easy 
fix is to replace the /14" nylaflow with either 3/16" or 1/8" nylaflow.  The 
smaller tubing still stretches, but the surface area is so much smaller that 
the brakes still work well.  I found this issue on my KR 28 years ago, then 
replaced the tubing with 3/16" Nylaflow, which was still in it when I sold the 
plane 24 years later.  I have fixed brake issues on numerous EAB aircraft by 
swapping out the 1/4 to 3/16" lines.  Arion Lightnings now recommend using 1/8" 
nylaflow lines for brakes.  This may or may not be your problem, but if you 
have 1/4" nylon or plastic tubing, I would bet on it.

-Jeff Scott
Arkansas Ozarks

Sent: Wednesday, July 02, 2025 at 8:31 AM
From: "mark jones via KRnet" <[email protected]>
To: "KRnet" <[email protected]>
Cc: "mark jones" <[email protected]>
Subject: KRnet> Brakes
Hell All,
I am so ready to fly WunderBird. I have all issues resolved with the exception 
of my right brake. It is a Grove caliper with Matco toe operated master 
cylinder. My issue is no braking authority to amount to much. I really have to 
fight it to get it to turn right. The pedal is hard. It will only depress about 
1/4 of an inch. If I pump it, I get some braking but nowhere near enough. I can 
make a left turn on a dime with ease. The left pedal has a good inch of 
depression. Is there too much fluid in the right system? Can air in the system 
cause a hard pedal? I thought air in a system creates a mushy pedal. Any help 
or ideas are much needed and appreciated. As soon as this is corrected, there 
will be another KR in the air.

Mark Jones (N771MJ)
Oldsmar, FL

[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
www.flykr2s.com<http://www.flykr2s.com>
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