by Rossi » Fri Sep 11, 2009 10:52 pm
Mick,
As I understand it, the spongey feeling from the brakes comes from the seals deteriorating due to the dirt and shit that gets into the callipers and grabbing at the pistons, when you release your brake the seals pull the pistons back into the caliper ever so slightly which means you have that extra bit of travel when you apply the brakes again before they actually compress the pads onto the disc which gives you that shitty spongey feeling.
after hearing the problems of getting the pistons out of the calipers thought i would give this piece of advice.
only do one at a time
1 take off your calipers from fork legs
2 remove brake pads
3 find a good solid peice of wood to fit in the slot of the calipers where the pads where
4 pump your break lever so the pistons push into the wood
5 keep pumping till they are all out (this might take some time if they have noy been looked after ) (JOESHOEY)
6 LEAVE THE WOOD IN PLACE
7 now do the same to the other caliper
NOW GIVE THEM A BLOODY GOOD CLEAN AND KEEP ON TOP OF THEM
If that does not work then
Remove caliper bolts, slip the calipers off the discs, take the pads out, slip them back on the discs and pump the pistons out to their fullest extension. remove calipers.
Sit at the kitchen table with them on a tray, an old toothbrush, some brake fluid and a can of brake cleaner.
Liberally douse the pistons with brake fluid and set to them with the toothbrush until EVERY blemish has disappeared, spray with brake cleaner and then attack with dry cloths until shiny (all the way round EVERY piston), finally lubricate each piston lightly with brake fluid and push them back into the caliper bodies fully, cleaning off excess fluid with kitchen paper.
Put back on bike, bleed through in the usual fashion and THEN, half close the nipple and bleed through another resevoir or two full (the extra pressure created by this method seems to help).
Re-fill the resevoir and put the cap on then start pumping that lever, as hard back to the lever as you can about 50 times.
Voila, you have decent lever travel / feel for..oooh...days.
I'm not a great fan of leaving resevoirs open (or caps off of brake fluid bottles) because brake fluid is excellent at dragging moisture out of the air and you don't want that.
Just go out to the bike now and pump the lever as hard as you can about 50-60 times (hard, not neccessarily super fast) I bet it improves markedly (a sign of the top pistons being sticky).
tieing back the lever actually closes off the system, it doesn't allow air to get back to the master cylinder (actually prevents it) but the constant preasure on the brake pistons of tieing it back over night can allow any pistons that are stuck to the seals (causing them to retract too far giving long spongy lever travel) to slip through the seal thus reducing the lever travel..
If you've tried all ideas and didnt quite get it as good as you want then Rossi's tip of the day is........ Undo the four bolts that hold caliper together, pump the brake then do them back up
Last edited by
Rossi on Fri Sep 11, 2009 11:09 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I don't suffer from insanity; I enjoy every minute of it.