Ok i stripped my front brakes down to clean them as i have been getting a squeal from the front from starting about 40ish, when i noticed that on both sides i am getting uneven pad wear.
So have ordered some replacement seals of the internet and i am going to attemp to strip and replace all the relevant seals on both brake calipers, soooooo i have been reading my haynes manual and was wondering if anyone had any hints / tips that they found helped when do their brakes.
Reason for asking there is a small section that is a bit grey to me, basically the manual says to clamp a bit of wood over one side to prevent the pistons on one side from moving, then to apply pressure to the brake lever until the oter side "pop" out, it then says to remove the seals and replace the pistons, clamp the wood on this side and repeat to get the other pistons out.
the grey area for me is once i get the first set of pistons out what stops air getting back into the system........and yes i intend to replace the brake fluid with fresh stuff.
Cheers
Stu :thumbup
Alrite Stu.
Like you've worked out, there isn't a way to stop air getting in the system after taking one of the pistons out.
I did mine by taking off the calipers and using a footpump to push each piston out. I cut an old inner tube valve out and sealed it into where you screw the banjo bolt, you can use compressed air if your carefull because the pistons do seem to shoot out at 100mph!
Take your time with it, clean out all the grooves where the seals sit and red rubber grease the pistons when you put them back in.
Simon
I use a compressor with a blow gun with a section of rubber tube on the nozzle to form a seal but if that fails I use one of these:
Owner of Motorcycle Republic, Specialist in unfucking things that others have fucked up.
You can take one side out, clean the stuff in there, put them back in and then pop the other side and clean under there.
Or, if you use clamps to get both sides of the piston near the middle, then you can usually get one side out then just jiggle the other side with your fingers to get all out at once. If they are very stiff then that won't work.
(25-10-11, 08:16 AM)Deefer666 link Wrote:I use a compressor with a blow gun with a section of rubber tube on the nozzle to form a seal but if that fails I use one of these:
![[Image: piston%20removal%20tool.jpg]](http://www.cjaccessories.co.uk/images/T/piston%20removal%20tool.jpg)
Thats the way to do it.
Later
(25-10-11, 08:16 AM)Deefer666 link Wrote:I use a compressor with a blow gun with a section of rubber tube on the nozzle to form a seal but if that fails I use one of these:
![[Image: piston%20removal%20tool.jpg]](http://www.cjaccessories.co.uk/images/T/piston%20removal%20tool.jpg)
I used a pair of these and they were great until I got to the seized pots. Don't be tempted to do what I did and use mole grips, they make a right mess of the caliper pots. Looking back I should have pushed the pots out as far as possible using clamps and wood before I took the caliper off the brake line (was replacing them at the time). I don't know if they're cheap/common but conventional pliers with gripping faces made of a softer metal might help if this happens to you.
thou shalt not kick
(25-10-11, 06:38 PM)Kenny Dave link Wrote: You can take one side out, clean the stuff in there, put them back in and then pop the other side and clean under there.
Or, if you use clamps to get both sides of the piston near the middle, then you can usually get one side out then just jiggle the other side with your fingers to get all out at once. If they are very stiff then that won't work.
Excuse me for being thick but what are these? they look like some sort of reverse pliers that whould clamp on the inside of the piston.............if i am right where would i get something like this?
oh and is it an easy enough job to replace the seals or is it a right git
Could have done with a pair of those today... in the end a set of circlip pliers did the job (just).
Toolbox.co.uk have a nice looking pair made by Sealey for £16.35, cheaper Draper ones are also listed.
ooooooook pliers ordered, planning on clamping the brake pipe when they come and taking the caliper to pieces on my work bench
as the pistons aren't seized i guess they will come out ok with the pliers, going to repeat that on the otherside once that is done
going to get both calipers back on the bike and then change the brake fluid (after removing the clamps).
i'd clamp one side and pump the other side out nearly all the way. then swap the clamp over to the side that is nearly out and pump the other side out. then just pull out the side thats left
Never liked the idea of clamping the brake lines.. seems like it can't do them much good. Instead, I wrap a big elastic band round the brake lever and grip (closes off the flow through the master cylinder).
The outer dust seals on the calipers can be picked out easily with a fingernail. The main seal is a bit trickier as it's deeper in the cylinder and much thicker, you can lever it out with a small jeweller's screwdriver, but take care not to damage the outer face of the slot the ring is seated in. If you've a suitable bit of steel wire about a millimetre in diameter then flatten and bend the tip you can hook the ring out from the back. Diagram might make the idea clearer:
Nice diagram Fazerider :thumbup .
sorry to hijack but is it not possible to split the caliper in any way? Last I looked it seemed almost like you need some sort of magical yamaha tool to fit inside the bluespots on the outside.
(02-11-11, 02:02 AM)jumpnut link Wrote: sorry to hijack but is it not possible to split the caliper in any way? Last I looked it seemed almost like you need some sort of magical yamaha tool to fit inside the bluespots on the outside. A year or so ago on here some well respected guy said on no account try to remove those blue plug things. I can't remember why not but I wouldn't try it if I were you. (If you do please let us know the result :lol )
You can split the rear caliper but unfortunately Yamaha don't sell a replacement seal that goes between the two halves. However from this site I believe a Suzuki seal part no. 6910734200 does the job. Never used it myself.
DO NOT attempt to remove the blue plug! They are bonded in and if you take them out then the caliper is effectively fucked. The tools should not be availabe to the public and are a wase of money.
Owner of Motorcycle Republic, Specialist in unfucking things that others have fucked up.
clamping brake lines - OMFG - just remind me never to have you work on my bike
Fat Maggot Clothing Company - remember FOCU15 to claim your foccers discount
:o clamping the brake line was what i used to do on cars and as the material looked similar i thought i could used
the brake hose clamps i have :o
cars and bike - big difference - and if you get it wrong with a car at least you have a seat belt and the car as protection when it goes wrong. always amazes me that people will play with brakes - play with the exhaust, lights, paint whatever - but to play with the brakes when you dont know 110% what you are doing, would seem to be one of the reasons why the EU might be looking to change the rules lol
Fat Maggot Clothing Company - remember FOCU15 to claim your foccers discount
I replaced all the seals on my front calipers last year. Dont save a couple of quid by getting pattern parts. I had a mare and ended up buying a set of genuine Yamaha seals. The pattern ones did not seem to fit correctly, maybe inferior rubber.....
13-11-11, 05:46 PM
(This post was last modified: 13-11-11, 05:52 PM by deenybean.)
I have a similair problem to those mentioned here. I replaced the piston seals on the front caliper after the bike failed it's MOT. The MOT tester said the brakes were binding and suggested replacing the seals. After doing that I bled the brakes following the instructions in the Haynes manual, but the brakes still feel spongy and I can pull the brake lever right back to the handle bar. Does anyone have any ideas what I've done wrong or suggestions for what else I can try?
I also noticed that when operating the brake lever once, the pistons don't all move equally, the small piston on one side of the caliper and the large piston on the other side moved out while the other two pistons hardly moved at all. Cause for concern?
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