Corium
Guest
Need help please!
I have a 94 R1100GS - 58k miles so getting on a bit.
The old dear has been sat in the Garage most of the winter & seemed OK when taken out every now and then.
However just noticed that the brakes (front) were sticking on a little. This is noticable by slightly faster deceleration when closing the throtle, but mainly when pushing the bike in the garage - very diff to move about.
What i have done so far.
Taken calipers off & changed the pads - this was hamperd by not being able to get all four pistons to retract at the same time. Push 2 in & the other 2 come out. This happend on both calipers so leads me to think that this is not a caliper problem, but a circuit problem - fluid not getting back to the res (this was not too full), or is it. Had to use zip ties to make this happen.
While changing the pads gave the calipers a dam good clean, tooth brush and cleaner fluid.
Breaking is now very good but the drag is still there, and the disks get hot obviously.
Is this a master cyclinder problem?
Thanks, Graham
I have a 94 R1100GS - 58k miles so getting on a bit.
The old dear has been sat in the Garage most of the winter & seemed OK when taken out every now and then.
However just noticed that the brakes (front) were sticking on a little. This is noticable by slightly faster deceleration when closing the throtle, but mainly when pushing the bike in the garage - very diff to move about.
What i have done so far.
Taken calipers off & changed the pads - this was hamperd by not being able to get all four pistons to retract at the same time. Push 2 in & the other 2 come out. This happend on both calipers so leads me to think that this is not a caliper problem, but a circuit problem - fluid not getting back to the res (this was not too full), or is it. Had to use zip ties to make this happen.
While changing the pads gave the calipers a dam good clean, tooth brush and cleaner fluid.
Breaking is now very good but the drag is still there, and the disks get hot obviously.
Is this a master cyclinder problem?
Thanks, Graham
