TexasKnucklehead
Jedi Knight
Offline
To get my pistons out I made a air tool. I used the end of one of the old rubber brake hoses, and soldered a bicycle tube valve to it (I don't have a compressor). I put the tool where a line would go, pumped it to 120 lbs and waited. Then I used a pipe wrench to rotate the exposed edge of the piston. All four came out pretty easily. They wouldn't budge after a week of PBblaster soaking inside and out, with the rubber boot picked completly away.
So while I was waiting for new pistons to arrive, I cleaned up and painted the calipers with ceramic paint. The cylinder walls were starting to rust so I greased them. To remove the grease, I used carb cleaner, which took the ceramic paint off. I decided it looks more original with the paint removed anyway.
Assuming I'm going with DOT5/synthetic brake fluid, I assume I need to be sure all the grease is removed. I also assume I should lubricate the new seals with DOT5 during assembly?
So while I was waiting for new pistons to arrive, I cleaned up and painted the calipers with ceramic paint. The cylinder walls were starting to rust so I greased them. To remove the grease, I used carb cleaner, which took the ceramic paint off. I decided it looks more original with the paint removed anyway.
Assuming I'm going with DOT5/synthetic brake fluid, I assume I need to be sure all the grease is removed. I also assume I should lubricate the new seals with DOT5 during assembly?
Hey Guest!
smilie in place of the real @
Pretty Please - add it to our Events forum(s) and add to the calendar! >> 