Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

I don't think my brake pads are supposed to look like this (pics) lol

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • JeremyL
    replied
    Originally posted by Rasputin View Post
    They are supposed to be that way. You can clean the caliper piston seals and lube the brake parts that are supposed to swivel which will help with drag but the angles on those pads will be there on brand new ones. Only on specials too.
    I didn't realize the pads were cut at that angle until I took them off and was actually taking them off to lube all the parts, hoping it'd help with the dragging. I have a 97 F-150 that had a stuck front brake and simply cleaning and lubing the brake parts and pads fixed it.

    Also, I took a flat head screw driver, when the brakes were sticking earlier, and carefully pried at the front pads, away from the disc. I could easily push the bike back and forth... but after I squeezed the brake lever it went back dragging bad until I used the screw driver on it again.

    So maybe between cleaning the calipers and greasing everything plus replacing this nasty fluid my dragging might be fixed. Probably get a few mpg out of it too haha.

    What specifically needs to be lubed? The pins and the backs of the pads? Anything else?

    Leave a comment:


  • JeremyL
    replied
    Originally posted by bikerphil View Post
    The pads are supposed to be like that, replace that bolt if it is bent. Dragging brakes are caused by dirty brake fluid gumming up the master cylinder fluid return hole and/or crystalized brake fluid behind the caliper piston seals.
    Wow now I feel dumb. When I saw the pads I was like AH-HA because I've never seen any brake pads on a car or a bike (although I've only owned like 5 bikes before) like that. At first I thought you were being sarcastic. I kept staring at the wheel and caliper trying to figure out how else to put them together.


    Also, since you mentioned the dirty brake fluid (and since my pads are apparently okay) I actually got the front brake fluid cover off just this past weekend AFTER TWO YEARS of trying. The screws are in poor shape and I was afraid I would strip the heads of the screws as I did with 2 other older bike I had before. I got a proper fitting screw driver, pushed down HARD, and took my time and they all 4 loosened up. The fluid was pretty rough looking but I've seen worse. I was planning on replacing it anyways. The level feels very firm so I'm hoping I won't have to rebuild the MC although I've rebuilt a few on older bikes from the 70/80s that I had and it was easy. Maybe I'll get away with just changing the fluid. Glad I check with you guys on the pads I was ready to order another set.

    And you weren't just messing with me right?

    Leave a comment:


  • Rasputin
    replied
    They are supposed to be that way. You can clean the caliper piston seals and lube the brake parts that are supposed to swivel which will help with drag but the angles on those pads will be there on brand new ones. Only on specials too.

    Leave a comment:


  • bikerphil
    replied
    The pads are supposed to be like that, replace that bolt if it is bent. Dragging brakes are caused by dirty brake fluid gumming up the master cylinder fluid return hole and/or crystalized brake fluid behind the caliper piston seals.
    Last edited by bikerphil; 04-21-2013, 06:24 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • I don't think my brake pads are supposed to look like this (pics) lol

    I traded a Honda CBR for my XS11 a couple of Summers ago and have spent the last 2 years (in what little spare time I have) undoing all the idiotic stuff the previous owner did wrong to the bike. Anyways, I won't list all those things but let's just say that my XS11, which was supposed to be "ready to ride" and "basically restored" has taken about $700 in parts and hours and hours of my labor and it's still nothing special.

    Anyways, as long as I've owned it I thought "boy this thing sure is heavy, it's hard to even back up or even to push forward." Coming from a 600cc sport bike I was sure that was why. And because of all the work I've been doing to get the bike road worthy I probably didn't ride more than 15-20 min at a time until this year. But I was riding last week and after an hour long ride or so I was parking and noticed it felt like the bike was just rolling so much better as I came to a step... like being in neutral and rolling to a stop versus being in 1st revved up where the gearing will hold you back. When I stopped I was able to push the bike around with easy and it finally hit me -- the brakes were dragging. Finally figured out it was the front and pulled the calipers off. The pics below show what I saw:



    This is one side of the front. The other is the same way. I'm pretty sure the pads aren't supposed to be angled like that but I don't know what the problem would be. Is it a wheel spacing issue or the wrong pads or what? And obviously I didn't put the pads on, the previous owner did, and I'm sure he screwed it up by putting something on backwards or by leaving a part off. But I would've thought if it was going to wear at that much of an angle it wouldn't have even went together properly in the first place.

    Here is the bolt I pulled from the caliper, with the spacers and stuff in the order that they were on the bolt:
Working...
X