Pages: 1 [2]  All   Go Down
Print

Topic: Brakes dragging after tire change (fixed!)  (Read 1971 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Fourstring
Worth a dollar
*

Reputation 28
Offline Offline

Motorcycles: Ninja 650, ZX-9
GPS: Glendale Heights, IL
Miles Typed: 5846

My Photo Gallery





Ignore
« Reply #20 on: September 02, 2010, 12:36:59 PM »

Scott, I did try your method, no dice. Mac, I don't have a speedo cable; the wheel spins great w/out brakes on.

I'll take the brakes apart tonight- sad that they're easier to me than a hub.  Thanks everyone.
Logged

When in doubt, throw a party.  Even if nobody shows up, you'll have a fridge full of beer and your house has never been cleaner.
Members, please login to hide this ad.

Guests, please register to hide this ad.
« Reply #20 on: September 02, 2010, 12:36:59 PM »

 Logged
scottzilla
*

Reputation -236
Offline Offline

Years Contributed: '10
Years Supported: '11
Motorcycles: CBR1100XX, 33hp oversized dirt bike, 08 Tuono
GPS: NY
Miles Typed: 8504

My Photo Gallery





Ignore
« Reply #21 on: September 02, 2010, 05:43:11 PM »


Scott, I did try your method, no dice. Mac, I don't have a speedo cable; the wheel spins great w/out brakes on.

I'll take the brakes apart tonight- sad that they're easier to me than a hub.  Thanks everyone.


Gotta be the brakes.  One of the pistons is hung up on some grit or something.  
Logged

They're finding dead bodies where I ride.

The Wrath of Con Pt. 4 "One thing is for sure however, I will never publicly promote or let it be known that I am a member of STN again".
Fourstring
Worth a dollar
*

Reputation 28
Offline Offline

Motorcycles: Ninja 650, ZX-9
GPS: Glendale Heights, IL
Miles Typed: 5846

My Photo Gallery





Ignore
« Reply #22 on: September 02, 2010, 09:11:55 PM »



Gotta be the brakes.  One of the pistons is hung up on some grit or something.  


Fail.

Took the brakes apart, cleaned them to a shine.  Greased all contact points, reassembled.

Loosened the pinch bolts and axle, bounced the bike on the front suspension with the front brake engaged, rear stand on for guidance.  Tightened one side of pinch bolts, tightened the axle, tightened the remaining side of pinch bolts.  I can get half a turn of the wheel.

I suck.  I'm sitting out the track day on Monday.   Sad

Edit- In anyone's experience, do mechanics usually come out to track days whom might be able to look at my wheel?
« Last Edit: September 03, 2010, 05:22:50 AM by Fourstring » Logged

When in doubt, throw a party.  Even if nobody shows up, you'll have a fridge full of beer and your house has never been cleaner.
scottzilla
*

Reputation -236
Offline Offline

Years Contributed: '10
Years Supported: '11
Motorcycles: CBR1100XX, 33hp oversized dirt bike, 08 Tuono
GPS: NY
Miles Typed: 8504

My Photo Gallery





Ignore
« Reply #23 on: September 03, 2010, 05:42:06 AM »



Fail.

Took the brakes apart, cleaned them to a shine.  Greased all contact points, reassembled.

Loosened the pinch bolts and axle, bounced the bike on the front suspension with the front brake engaged, rear stand on for guidance.  Tightened one side of pinch bolts, tightened the axle, tightened the remaining side of pinch bolts.  I can get half a turn of the wheel.

I suck.  I'm sitting out the track day on Monday.   Sad

Edit- In anyone's experience, do mechanics usually come out to track days whom might be able to look at my wheel?



If you have guys that mount tires at the track, you could give that a try.  
It's totally suspicious that this happened after you did the tire change.  This eliminates warped rotors and warped calipers.
How about this one: wheel bearing.  the bearing is not seated exactly as it was prior to the change (That would be impossible).  The bearing wore a bit from being cocked, you reinstall and the high spot is in a different place.  This would cause drag at least until you wore the bearing down again.
When you removed the brake pads, were they wearing evenly?
Logged

They're finding dead bodies where I ride.

The Wrath of Con Pt. 4 "One thing is for sure however, I will never publicly promote or let it be known that I am a member of STN again".
jadziadax8
nerd
*

Reputation 42
Online Online

Motorcycles: 2007 Ninja 650
GPS: Glendale Heights, IL
Miles Typed: 2553

My Photo Gallery





Ignore
« Reply #24 on: September 03, 2010, 06:02:03 AM »




It's totally suspicious that this happened after you did the tire change.  This eliminates warped rotors and warped calipers.


I agree with the first part 100%.  Help me with the 2nd, though- what's the difference between a warped caliper and a stuck caliper?

The brakes were worn evenly when I changed the tire; the pads were only a couple thousand miles old anyway.  The wheel turns silently and freely with the brakes off.  Maybe I need to revisit the stuck caliper?

-I'm taking the pads off
-Cleaning the pin and retaining spring with a wire brush and brake cleaner
-Push calipers in (piss-cup is open)
-Shooting a bit of brake cleaner into the caliper, wiping clean
-greasing the back of the pads, pin, and contact points
-reassembling

What did I miss/do half-ass?

Edit: and again, Nate posts as me.  You'd think he'd learn to look. Rolleyes
« Last Edit: September 03, 2010, 08:57:50 AM by jadziadax8 » Logged

Yeah, it's a girl's bike.  It's THIS girl's bike!
KLRchickie
Motorcycle Freak
*

Reputation 10
Offline Offline

Motorcycles: '05 KLR 650, '06 Monster S2R1000, '08 WR250X
GPS: Calgary, AB, CA
Miles Typed: 1000

My Photo Gallery





Ignore
« Reply #25 on: September 03, 2010, 06:29:45 AM »

 

-I'm taking the pads off
-Cleaning the pin and retaining spring with a wire brush and brake cleaner
-Push calipers in (piss-cup is open)
-Shooting a bit of brake cleaner into the caliper, wiping clean
-greasing the back of the pads, pin, and contact points
-reassembling

What did I miss/do half-ass?


Try pushing the pistons OUT a bit as the first step of this sequence.  With the caliper off the rotor, squeeze the brake lever until the pads seat together, then pop out the pads, clean the parts of the pistons that are showing & proceed as above.  I don't use brake cleaner, as I can't breathe around the stuff.  I find methyl hydrate & a q-tip do the job just fine.  Sometimes a piston sticks a bit & I have to fiddle with things to make them all move out of the caliper a similar amount.  You really need to clean the ring of crap that has accumulated on the piston at the caliper off - preferably *before* you force it into the seal.

I clean front brakes pretty much every time we have a reason to have a front wheel off.  At least every tire change, there seems to end up being a reason in between tire changes too Rolleyes

Good luck!
Logged

scottzilla
*

Reputation -236
Offline Offline

Years Contributed: '10
Years Supported: '11
Motorcycles: CBR1100XX, 33hp oversized dirt bike, 08 Tuono
GPS: NY
Miles Typed: 8504

My Photo Gallery





Ignore
« Reply #26 on: September 03, 2010, 06:33:10 AM »




I agree with the first part 100%.  Help me with the 2nd, though- what's the difference between a warped caliper and a stuck caliper?

The brakes were worn evenly when I changed the tire; the pads were only a couple thousand miles old anyway.  The wheel turns silently and freely with the brakes off.  Maybe I need to revisit the stuck caliper?

-I'm taking the pads off
-Cleaning the pin and retaining spring with a wire brush and brake cleaner
-Push calipers in (piss-cup is open)
-Shooting a bit of brake cleaner into the caliper, wiping clean
-greasing the back of the pads, pin, and contact points
-reassembling

What did I miss/do half-ass?



It's rare but calipers can warp the same way a brake rotor can warp.  Basically the caliper gets out of shape from heat cycles.
A stuck caliper isn't necessarly warped, just stuck, or binding or not depressing all the way, etc.  This is generally caused by debris, leaking seals, etc.  A warped caliper can "Function" perfectly but still be warped.
You pushed the calipers in, then cleaned the pistons?  Lots of grit & junk can still be stuck to the sides of the pistons.  You hid the stuff when you pushed the pistons back in.  This can absolutely cause a caliper to get hung up.  The pads, as they wear slowly, expose more & more of the pistons to debris.  When you install new pads (OR push the old pads in) all this stuff remains stuck to the sides and forced in to the calipers.  These parts are sealed, so you can't clean them unless you get the pistons back out again,.  I always clean my pistons prior to depressing them for wheel/pad removal.
Logged

They're finding dead bodies where I ride.

The Wrath of Con Pt. 4 "One thing is for sure however, I will never publicly promote or let it be known that I am a member of STN again".
Members, please login to hide this ad.

Guests, please register to hide this ad.
« Reply #26 on: September 03, 2010, 06:33:10 AM »


 Logged
scottzilla
*

Reputation -236
Offline Offline

Years Contributed: '10
Years Supported: '11
Motorcycles: CBR1100XX, 33hp oversized dirt bike, 08 Tuono
GPS: NY
Miles Typed: 8504

My Photo Gallery





Ignore
« Reply #27 on: September 03, 2010, 06:34:46 AM »


 

Try pushing the pistons OUT a bit as the first step of this sequence.  With the caliper off the rotor, squeeze the brake lever until the pads seat together, then pop out the pads, clean the parts of the pistons that are showing & proceed as above.  I don't use brake cleaner, as I can't breathe around the stuff.  I find methyl hydrate & a q-tip do the job just fine.  Sometimes a piston sticks a bit & I have to fiddle with things to make them all move out of the caliper a similar amount.  You really need to clean the ring of crap that has accumulated on the piston at the caliper off - preferably *before* you force it into the seal.

I clean front brakes pretty much every time we have a reason to have a front wheel off.  At least every tire change, there seems to end up being a reason in between tire changes too Rolleyes

Good luck!



Agreed.  Clean with the pistons out.  This is what I poorly described in my reply to jadz. Lol
Logged

They're finding dead bodies where I ride.

The Wrath of Con Pt. 4 "One thing is for sure however, I will never publicly promote or let it be known that I am a member of STN again".
thatguy
*

Reputation 8
Offline Offline

Motorcycles: a few
GPS: Aintree
Miles Typed: 3919

My Photo Gallery





Ignore
« Reply #28 on: September 03, 2010, 06:57:17 AM »

Any chance you bent a rotor? Worth a look.
Logged

"Speak when you are spoken to,but don't pretend you are right.............."
chornbe

« Reply #29 on: September 03, 2010, 07:02:08 AM »


Any chance you bent a rotor? Worth a look.


That was going to be my suggestion as well.  Thumbsup

It doesn't take much and if a tool was resting on the rotor during a tire swap, and some pressure was applied...
Logged
MadMax96
Old Skool Forever
*

Reputation 5
Offline Offline

Years Contributed: '08, '09
Motorcycles: 1999 Bandit 1200S
GPS: Round Lake, IL
Miles Typed: 1232

My Photo Gallery





Ignore
« Reply #30 on: September 03, 2010, 07:15:56 AM »


Any chance you bent a rotor? Worth a look.


I was thinking this too.  After all this PLEEEEASE don't say you were pushing on the tire with the wheel on the bare floor.  
Logged

-Matt
1999 Suzuki Bandit 1200S Pic
    Get a frickin' manual and man up.
Fourstring
Worth a dollar
*

Reputation 28
Offline Offline

Motorcycles: Ninja 650, ZX-9
GPS: Glendale Heights, IL
Miles Typed: 5846

My Photo Gallery





Ignore
« Reply #31 on: September 03, 2010, 07:29:17 AM »

I used a dial on the rotors- they're fine.  I keep an old burgman tire around for this exact purpose.

I guess I've got another date with my brakes. Buh.
Logged

When in doubt, throw a party.  Even if nobody shows up, you'll have a fridge full of beer and your house has never been cleaner.
tomek
*

Reputation 2
Offline Offline

Motorcycles: couple
GPS: Chicago
Miles Typed: 1359

My Photo Gallery





Ignore
« Reply #32 on: September 03, 2010, 10:04:37 AM »

Scottzilla and others pretty much covered everything,,,,,,,front wheel installed backward ?,,,,,,, Headscratch usually they are not symmetrical,,,,,,
Logged

Fast bikes save lives

If you are not sliding you are not riding
Fourstring
Worth a dollar
*

Reputation 28
Offline Offline

Motorcycles: Ninja 650, ZX-9
GPS: Glendale Heights, IL
Miles Typed: 5846

My Photo Gallery





Ignore
« Reply #33 on: September 04, 2010, 09:50:24 PM »





Agreed.  Clean with the pistons out.  This is what I poorly described in my reply to jadz. Lol


That did it!  Two calipers on each side were frozen up.  Two beer job with a tooth brush, some wood blocks, and a bottle o' Dawn.  Great tip on getting the pistons out; the surface was clean, but grunge had seeped it's way to the sides.  Turns out the tire change wasn't bad, but it did bring to light something else that was already wrong.

Thanks everyone.  STN comes through again; I'd still have a broken bike if it wasn't for your help.
Logged

When in doubt, throw a party.  Even if nobody shows up, you'll have a fridge full of beer and your house has never been cleaner.
Members, please login to hide this ad.

Guests, please register to hide this ad.
« Reply #33 on: September 04, 2010, 09:50:24 PM »


 Logged
scottzilla
*

Reputation -236
Offline Offline

Years Contributed: '10
Years Supported: '11
Motorcycles: CBR1100XX, 33hp oversized dirt bike, 08 Tuono
GPS: NY
Miles Typed: 8504

My Photo Gallery





Ignore
« Reply #34 on: September 05, 2010, 02:04:11 PM »

Well, the important thing is I was right. Lol

Glad it worked out. Thumbsup
Logged

They're finding dead bodies where I ride.

The Wrath of Con Pt. 4 "One thing is for sure however, I will never publicly promote or let it be known that I am a member of STN again".
veefer800canuck
Nicky Hayden stole my childhood!
*

Reputation -39
Offline Offline

Years Contributed: '10
GPS: Whitecourt, Alberta, Canada, EH?
Miles Typed: 5249

My Photo Gallery



WWW

Ignore
« Reply #35 on: September 05, 2010, 02:56:42 PM »

Yay!  Thumbsup
Logged

 
Pages: 1 [2]  All   Go Up
Print
Jump to:  



ST.N

Copyright © 2001 - 2012 Sport-Touring.Net.
All rights reserved.

SimplePortal 2.3.1 © 2008-2009, SimplePortal