robracer wrote:Did you put a new kit in the MC?
no new kit. i inspected the piston it looked good , no pitting etc... and the rubber seal looked ok, but thinking about it now the seal did seem quite hard. your right rob, a good place to start. which parts should i replace in the MC?
Blurr wrote:Might be a slow air leak in the MC seals.
should i only be worried about the seal that sits at the end of the piston ? the seal that sits immediately under the MC cover is just for stopping reservoir leaks right?
Jonno wrote:What year 9R and are the lines the originals?
Is it spongy then holds pressure or eventually leaks down until the lever hits the bars?
Bleed it again (I use a self bleed kit $5 supacheep).
Reason that cable tieing works is it temporarily expands the rubber braided lines to the max, so when you go to use the brakes next it is already expanded and taking less lever to activate the brake caliper pistons. The other theory is it helps air bubbles rise to the master cyl under pressure.
In any case if this is on your 9R I would say get braided lines if they are still original as this may be one part of the issue that they are old and stressed, the other would to use the self bleeding kit and keep flushing it through for quite a while (I have used nearly 300ml to be sure)
HTH
it's a B4 model (12/96) 6 pot calipers. brake lines original.
yeah, spongy then holds pressure.
i will go and check out the self bleed kit.
i never thought about replacing brake lines but again it does make sense. most things fatigue over time.cheers
Sulli wrote:you should bleed it at the master cylinder first generally by cracking the banjo and ensure the master cylinder is set up level to pump out all the air
thanks Sulli, tried that too to no avail.
many thanks gents.
