Brake fade as you decscribe it is possibly a servo problem, or sticking caliper pistons if they are not used much. It is unlikely to be a seal or fluid problem if you maintain a hard pedal, and braking can be effected albeit with greater effort. If the fluid boils or master cylinder is ineffective, you would probably have pedal to the floor and trousers at the cleaners. You may check caliper / cylinder piston function with a rolling road brake test to see if braking effort is equal and correct at each pair of wheels. best done before and during the `fade´ situation has been achieved. If the same braking efficiency % is achieved, albeit with different pedal effort, then it's probably a servo-related problem. As a process of elimination, check for any vacuum leaks between the manifold, the vac. resevoir and the servo itself. There are multiple possibilities for vacuum leaks which may cause variable braking efficiency. Start at one end (manifold or Servo) and locate / inspect all vacuum hose and it's connections at each point. The Vac. hose hardens with age, softens with fluids spilt on it, and connections can loosen. Check if there is a working non-return connection in the Vac. resevoir. Check the vac. resevoir for corrosion / pinholing. As a test, just bypass all existing vac. hoses etc. with a temporary vac. hose and non-return between manifold stub and servo connection. Make sure that any hose used is really for vacuum and can not collapse. If braking efficiency is maintained then it is a vacuum problem and not a servo problem. If you are confident that all the Vac. equipment is in good condition then the servo itself is in question. The 3 litre has a powerful servo. If the servo is not effective the master-cylinder will be acting directly on the calipers / cylinders with good braking function but requiring much more effort. To compare servo function / non-function you can by-pass the servo by installing a temporary brake-pipe from master-cylinder direct out to the brake-pipes (e.g. at cross piece). Then try the brakes again (after bleeding), and see if it replicates the `faded´ situation. If so, then the `fade´ issue is probably servo related. I think the TE may have a Lockheed servo with moving main piston, which is not the easiest to rebuild. In case it is found to be at fault, it may prove much easier and more cost effective (i.e. adviseable) to install a new servo with the same ratio (e.g. from Chris Prince). And at the same time replace all vacuum hoses / non-returns as required, and re-paint the vac. resevoir after checking it for corrosion + pinholing. A weeping rear cylinder is often possible to re-seal with careful cleaning, internal polishing and a new set of seals. Use correct rubber-grease when installing the seals as it helps to prevent sticking pistons during periods of non-use. After any work on the 3 litre brakes the bleeding is very, very important and not always easy. Even when it appears that bleeding is complete, it is possible for a small amount of air to remain trapped under the servo reaction piston, which may cause the front brakes to bind after the system warms up. On cooling, they then free-off as the servo relaxes. This problem is lessened if the servo is installed with reaction piston underneath, so trapped air rises during bleeding, but pipework routing does not always allow this. So have plenty of fluid on hand, at least one extra pair of hands, and bleed multiple times, vigorously, with engine not running, and then again with engine running, repeated until you are 100% happy with the result. Giles Lacey Posted by lacey giles 09/10/2015 08:54:09