Have you ever rebuilt your calipers only to find they are dragging again the next day?
You won't find the fix in the manual but the problem was most likely caused by you when you thought you were only doing a good job.
The problem is the sleeve and rubber bushing that the caliper slide side to side on. The rubber bushing has some sort of grease in side of it and many just clean it out and regrease but here's where the problem lies. The manual doesn't tell you that the rubber bushing is natural rubber and intolerant of mineral based lubes. If you grease it with axle grease, it'll be stuck by morning.
The fix is to extract the sleeve then the rubber bushing from the caliper, take them inside and wash them thoroughly with dish soap and water as hot as you can stand working with. Scrub the bushing out 2 or 3 times and dry with a paper towel. If any grease comes out on the paper towel, wash them again. Also thoroughly scrub the sleeve and dry them.
Now for the lube. Go to the nearest gun store and buy a bottle of RCBS cartridge case lube. Be sure and get the stuff in the bottle and not the tube. This stuff is a vegetable based lube that is more of a grease in thickness than oil and is an industrial version of KY jelly. Don't get and funny ideas now, this is for your brakes.
Insert the rubber bushings back into the calipers and squirt in some of the lube. Make sure there's enough to coat the inside of the bushing and a little extra. Coat the outside of the sleeve with lube and reinsert into the bushing making sure you take care to get the lip of the seal in the groove on the sleeve.
Re assemble as usual and the drag from the caliper sliders will be gone.
Geezer
(and you guys thought only I did electrical systems.)
You won't find the fix in the manual but the problem was most likely caused by you when you thought you were only doing a good job.
The problem is the sleeve and rubber bushing that the caliper slide side to side on. The rubber bushing has some sort of grease in side of it and many just clean it out and regrease but here's where the problem lies. The manual doesn't tell you that the rubber bushing is natural rubber and intolerant of mineral based lubes. If you grease it with axle grease, it'll be stuck by morning.
The fix is to extract the sleeve then the rubber bushing from the caliper, take them inside and wash them thoroughly with dish soap and water as hot as you can stand working with. Scrub the bushing out 2 or 3 times and dry with a paper towel. If any grease comes out on the paper towel, wash them again. Also thoroughly scrub the sleeve and dry them.
Now for the lube. Go to the nearest gun store and buy a bottle of RCBS cartridge case lube. Be sure and get the stuff in the bottle and not the tube. This stuff is a vegetable based lube that is more of a grease in thickness than oil and is an industrial version of KY jelly. Don't get and funny ideas now, this is for your brakes.
Insert the rubber bushings back into the calipers and squirt in some of the lube. Make sure there's enough to coat the inside of the bushing and a little extra. Coat the outside of the sleeve with lube and reinsert into the bushing making sure you take care to get the lip of the seal in the groove on the sleeve.
Re assemble as usual and the drag from the caliper sliders will be gone.
Geezer
(and you guys thought only I did electrical systems.)
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