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Schming, I suggest rounding off that leading edge of those rear brake pads to eliminate that unbearable squeal.
81H Venturer1100 "The Bentley" (on steroids) 97 Yamaha YZ250(age reducer) 92 Honda ST1100 "Twisty"(touring rocket) Age is relative to the number of seconds counted 'airing' out an 85ft. table-top.
NICE .................
Some great scenery for your 55 mile shake down run.
Looks like you are all set for XS East and a summer of riding. Hope putting a 30-40 degree bevel on the leading edge of those rear brake pads takes care of that squeal. Let us know if that solves the problem. btw: I assume the shiny brake pad abutment retainer clips are in good condition with no pitting, not bent etc.
That's Racoon Lake, Jeff. We camped there one Autumn and found out why it's named that, little SOB's stole the burger buns off the table as I was grillin' on the other end.
Sanded the pads down to a 35 degree relief angle, and did an 80 mile test run, it helped the grabbing but still squealed just not as bad and not at every stop like before.
The hardware is all new and in great shape.
So should I round them instead of the sharp angle as motoman suggested ?
1980 XS1100G "Dolly G" Full Dresser (with a coat of many colors )
1979 XS1100SF (stock-euro mods planned)
1984 XV700L Virago (to be hot-modded)
1983 XJ750MK Midnight Maxim (semi-restored DD)
1977 XS650D ( patiently awaiting resto)
Sometimes it takes a whole tank of gas before you can think straight.
from looking at the wear groove on the brand new pads it looks like there is a protrusion on the rotor about 1/4" in making that indention in the pad? Does the rotor have a ring around the rotor? not rosie or collar, the rotor Not sure what the other guys think but seems i've solved mystery squeaky brakes problems by sanding off any ring on the rotor. As you said, all new parts. Adding a little rounding to the leading edge (direction of rear wheel forward travel) of the pad as motoman mentioned might also help a bit. But i'd look for any oddity on the rotor itself and maybe sand it off so the entire rotor surface is smooth with no obvious raised ring that isn't wearing as fast as the rest of the rotor surface.
Smart raccoons making their heist when you weren't looking
Jeff
78' XS1100 E 78' XS1100 E
78' XS1100 E
'73 Norton 850 Commando
'99 Triumph Sprint ST
'02 G-Wing GL1800
After rounding all sharp corners on the pads the rear brakes were better but still squealed so I changed the disc rotor to a good stock one and "The Squeal is Gone and The Thrill is on
Note to self don't over drill the discs just cause it looks cool
84 holes seem to take to much mass that is needed to absorb the heat
1980 XS1100G "Dolly G" Full Dresser (with a coat of many colors )
1979 XS1100SF (stock-euro mods planned)
1984 XV700L Virago (to be hot-modded)
1983 XJ750MK Midnight Maxim (semi-restored DD)
1977 XS650D ( patiently awaiting resto)
Sometimes it takes a whole tank of gas before you can think straight.
I was wondering if you would find a fix before the XS East Rally. Phew, made it. Wouldn't want a nickname like Squeaky. I wonder what the optimum holes drilled count should be.
Ben, I would say your FANTASY is sitting in front of that sign.
81H Venturer1100 "The Bentley" (on steroids) 97 Yamaha YZ250(age reducer) 92 Honda ST1100 "Twisty"(touring rocket) Age is relative to the number of seconds counted 'airing' out an 85ft. table-top.
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