I wanted to share an interesting story. Last Monday it was 60+ degrees here in Detroit, so I decided to take the XJ out and blow the cobwebs out of her.
I put a new paint job on her over the winter, so the fuel system was BONE dry. I found it interesting that I put some gas it the tank, pushed the petcocks to Prime, and hit the starter button. Within 5-6 good cranks the beast thundered to life.
I am about 5 miles from home, and I notice that I am holding a steady speed, but I am cracking the throttle more and more. Not Good. By this point, I am approaching a gas station, so I pull the clutch to pull in. I hadn't applied the brakes yet, but the bike slowed so abruply I swore I had a handful of binders. Not Good.
As soon as I stop, I look at the front wheel, looks OK. I then look at the back and notice the rear rotor is glowing bright orange (like a toaster). I cannot even push the bike - the back wheel is locked. I pulled out the toolkit, and tried pushing the pads back - No Go. I then crack the bleeder, and boiling brake fluid spews forth. I have NEVER seen brake fluid boil. With the bleeder open, I can now force the pads back. I sit and wait a while to let things cool, and I drive carefully home only using the front brake with downshifting.
Hey, she seems a LOT faster on the way home .
Today I am taking the rear caliper apart for a good cleaning.
I put a new paint job on her over the winter, so the fuel system was BONE dry. I found it interesting that I put some gas it the tank, pushed the petcocks to Prime, and hit the starter button. Within 5-6 good cranks the beast thundered to life.
I am about 5 miles from home, and I notice that I am holding a steady speed, but I am cracking the throttle more and more. Not Good. By this point, I am approaching a gas station, so I pull the clutch to pull in. I hadn't applied the brakes yet, but the bike slowed so abruply I swore I had a handful of binders. Not Good.
As soon as I stop, I look at the front wheel, looks OK. I then look at the back and notice the rear rotor is glowing bright orange (like a toaster). I cannot even push the bike - the back wheel is locked. I pulled out the toolkit, and tried pushing the pads back - No Go. I then crack the bleeder, and boiling brake fluid spews forth. I have NEVER seen brake fluid boil. With the bleeder open, I can now force the pads back. I sit and wait a while to let things cool, and I drive carefully home only using the front brake with downshifting.
Hey, she seems a LOT faster on the way home .
Today I am taking the rear caliper apart for a good cleaning.
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