I'm wondering how practical it is to bench-test a brake booster, and am wondering what sort of fixture would be needed. I think I have a bad booster on one of my cars (takes lots of peddle force to brake the car), and I have three boosters in my parts pile, but I don't know if any of them work. Given the high cost of replacements, I'd like to confirm if the one on my car is really bad, and I'd love to figure out if the spares that I have are usable or just cores for rebuild.
Has anyone sorted out how to bench test a booster? Is testing for vacuum leaks all that needs to be tested, or is there a practical boost test that can be conducted?
I'm thinking that a vacuum pump, some fittings, and a gauge could be used to test for vacuum leakage?
And perhaps a spare master cylinder with an attached hydraulic pressure gauge to test boost pressure?
I've got a peddle assembly and master cylinder kicking around, along with a hydraulic pressure gauge and plenty of assorted fittings which could be the basis for a test fixture.
Or is there a simpler way to 80%-90% test them without actually installing it in the car and trying it. Or maybe a swap-out is the easiest way to test?