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Why am I having such a hard time bleeding?

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    Why am I having such a hard time bleeding?

    Cripes, i've been flushing an bleeding from brakes on motorcycles for the past 25 years without too much trouble (some inherantly take patients), but my '87 GSX-R has gotten to be the biggest friggin PIA to date ! I recently completely rebuilt the front 4 piston calipers with brand new OEM piston/seal kits. I am thinking a have a caliper piston that must be air bound. If I pull the brake lever, it almost goes to the bars, if i do like 3 quick pumps the brake action is rock hard ? If I wait 10 min., it get soft again. I've mighty-vac'd the lines for almost 3 hours, and i'm not getting any better brake action. Any thoughts ?

    #2
    your new seals have revealed what was a marginal master cylinder seal?

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      #3
      Try removing the calipers and pushing the pads as close together as possible before fitting the calipers over the rotor. I had a similar issue when I rebuilt my GS front calipers and someone posted this idea here. For some reason the pads tend to pull back to the point they were at when you fit them onto the rotors. I placed the calipers so just the leading edge of the pad was fitted onto the rotor. I then slowly pushed the pads in using the brake lever and then slid the calipers the rest of the way on. My brake lever was instantly rock solid. I know of at least one other forum member who has successfully used this method to firm up the brake lever.

      Thanks,
      Joe
      IBA# 24077
      '15 BMW R1200GS Adventure
      '07 Triumph Tiger 1050 ABS
      '08 Yamaha WR250R

      "Krusty's inner circle is a completely unorganized group of grumpy individuals uninterested in niceties like factual information. Our main purpose, in an unorganized fashion, is to do little more than engage in anecdotal stories and idle chit-chat while providing little or no actual useful information. And, of course, ride a lot and have tons of fun.....in a Krusty manner."

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        #4
        Originally posted by Joe Nardy View Post
        Try removing the calipers and pushing the pads as close together as possible before fitting the calipers over the rotor. I had a similar issue when I rebuilt my GS front calipers and someone posted this idea here. For some reason the pads tend to pull back to the point they were at when you fit them onto the rotors. I placed the calipers so just the leading edge of the pad was fitted onto the rotor. I then slowly pushed the pads in using the brake lever and then slid the calipers the rest of the way on. My brake lever was instantly rock solid. I know of at least one other forum member who has successfully used this method to firm up the brake lever.

        Thanks,
        Joe

        Man I did that once and had to split the calipers cos I got to excited and jammed the pistons together............
        it did get the things bled though as I recall

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by Joe Nardy View Post
          Try removing the calipers and pushing the pads as close together as possible before fitting the calipers over the rotor. I had a similar issue when I rebuilt my GS front calipers and someone posted this idea here. For some reason the pads tend to pull back to the point they were at when you fit them onto the rotors. I placed the calipers so just the leading edge of the pad was fitted onto the rotor. I then slowly pushed the pads in using the brake lever and then slid the calipers the rest of the way on. My brake lever was instantly rock solid. I know of at least one other forum member who has successfully used this method to firm up the brake lever.

          Thanks,
          Joe
          I've posted that trick before... in fact, i just did it again last week when i put new SS lines & rebuilt calipers & MC on the front of my 1100. As Joe mentioned, just squeeze them tight enough so you can push them back on over the rotor - this always fixes that spongy lever.
          '85 GS550L - SOLD
          '85 GS550E - SOLD
          '82 GS650GL - SOLD
          '81 GS750L - SOLD
          '82 GS850GL - trusty steed
          '80 GS1100L - son's project bike
          '82 GS1100G - SOLD
          '81 GS1100E - Big Red (daily rider)

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            #6
            Interesting idea. Thanks, i'll give it a try!

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