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CJ wrote:The seals on the pistons *look* ok but I think you're right as regards brake dust clogging them up. I've mailed U-save in the UK for price on a used caliper as I can't see any other way of sorting the problem. As far as I can see, theres no way to strip down the caliper
Ciaran
steelroe wrote:Ciaran,
You can get seal repair kits.
The piston should pull straight of the caliper. If you take it out and clean it with rust off or something similar. Remove the seal from the piston carefully.
There is a section on brake caliper maintenance in the FTO manuals.
Is there enough fluid in the reservoir?
Rory
CJ wrote:shane wrote:
How much were you quoted for the recon caliper from kempys?
NZ$106 for one used caliper and $110 shipping all in, it was €113 or so....
steelroe wrote:You still have cair in the system.
Rory
keville wrote:Ciaran the brakes are pretty good on my gr but i was wondering do the calipers for the gpx bolt on to the gr or is there adjustments to be made
Keville
CJ wrote:steelroe wrote:You still have cair in the system.
Rory
Thats what I thought as well, all sorted now thanks to the correct bleeding technique, theres a lot to be said for RTFM
However, I still have the original problem! Might leave it to the experts at this stage...
CJ
shane wrote:[I'm thinking of changing my brake fluid but having never done it before I want to make sure I do it right. I've had a quick look in the manual and I know that you have to do it in sequence - passenger side rear, drivers side front, drivers side rear, passenger side front
CJ wrote:shane wrote:[I'm thinking of changing my brake fluid but having never done it before I want to make sure I do it right. I've had a quick look in the manual and I know that you have to do it in sequence - passenger side rear, drivers side front, drivers side rear, passenger side front
You've got the sequence right anyway Shane. This is the way I did it:
1. From 2 drain points, (one front and rear), drain off as much of the old fluid without running the resevoir dry.
2. Fill the reservoir up with new fluid and repeat the same process, this time, from the other two drain points.
3. Fill the resevoir up again and bleed the brakes in the correct sequence.
Make sure you have 2 Lites of fluid just in case, there will be some wastage from the bleeding process. The important part is not to let the resevoir run dry so check if often during the process. When you've finished, pump the brake pedal to get the pressure back up again. If the pressure drops after a few seconds, theres still air in the system which means bleedin the system again.
Ciaran
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