Thanks for the response.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Front brake Frustration
Collapse
X
-
usin13
Originally posted by Road_Clam
Thanks for the response.
-
Originally posted by usin13I guess I will have to look again. Maybe I'm confusing it. When I look at that area, with the reservoir removed, it is a circle with the two screw holes on each side. Towards the front is a hole that goes through into the piston area. There is a divot for a whole of the same diameter next to that, but it is just metal filled, it doesn't go anywhere. I must be missing the return hole. Where would it be besides the ones I pointed out?Frosty (falsely accused of "Thread-Hijacking"!)
"Make it idiot proof and someone will make a better idiot."
Owner of:
1982 GS1100E
1995 Triumph Daytona 1200
Comment
-
usin13
Sure will
Originally posted by frosty5011Look carefully inside the small depression.
I will look once I get home tonight. I bet (hope) that is the problem. What is a good test, short of re-assembling the whole thing again, to see if it is clean?
I'm gonna be real red in the face if that's the issue
Comment
-
Road_Clam
-
usin13
Bracket Pin
Originally posted by Road_ClamDoes your calipers slide freely back and fourth on the bracket pins?
Comment
-
OklahomaPomade
Originally posted by usin13One more brake question, when you pull the brake lever, it puts fluid behind the piston which pushes it out. What makes the piston go back in? I assumed that when you let go of the lever, that the fluid kind of sucks it back in, but if this were the case, then pumping the lever with the caliper off the bike, wouldn't pop out the piston, and it does.
As far as your other question, heat should have little effect. Fluid will not compress like air does but it will expand and contract somewhat. The heat of day though, would have very little effect.
I cleaned the little hole in my lever piston with a HVAC tool called an Oriface Drill (very, very small). I couldn't even SEE the hole until I took a wire wheel to it!
Comment
-
OklahomaPomade
Originally posted by usin13Sure did. I paid special attention to that hole. If I have the plastic reservoir off and squeeze the handle, I can see the piston moving back and forth in the hole.
Comment
-
usin13
Knock on wood
Not understanding in the past that the little divot was actually the return hole I breezed right past it. Tonight I cleaned it thoroughly. As you may have suspected already, it was blocked. I took the end of a High E guitar string and cleaned it out really well. Then I rebled the system. What do you know, I'm an idiot.
It is working fine now. I have a slight drag on the wheel when I spin it, which I have read is normal, and the best part is, the drag doesn't change after I've pumped the lever a couple of times. So, keep your fingers crossed and knock on wood that it is remedied now.
I'm very happy because tomorrow is my Birthday and I really wanted to ride on my birthday.
Thanks for letting me waste your time with a question that has already been answered a million times. Don't block me from your lists to read posts from, I'm really a lot smarter than this made me look!!!! ;-)
Thanks again.
Comment
-
OklahomaPomade
I don't block people...Somebody else helped me with the same problem not long ago. Pass on your knowledge.
Comment
-
Road_Clam
Originally posted by OklahomaPomadeThe piston doesn't really go back in, merely pressure on it is relieved. This all goes back to that little hole on the master cylinder piston. It is a relief, of sorts (in fact, I think that's what it's called). The lever pushes the pistion, the piston moves the fluid, the fluid moves the caliper piston. The little hole allows fluid to "relieve" back into the line so it won't lock up.
As far as your other question, heat should have little effect. Fluid will not compress like air does but it will expand and contract somewhat. The heat of day though, would have very little effect.
I cleaned the little hole in my lever piston with a HVAC tool called an Oriface Drill (very, very small). I couldn't even SEE the hole until I took a wire wheel to it!
Comment
Comment