1 K1100LT 4 pot brembo rebuild Mon Jul 05, 2021 3:13 pm
attitude
active member
4 brake pistons are very difficult to move. one piston ends up moving then you have no air pressure to move the remaining. gets even more fun when you get 2 out and run out of fingers to plug the holes as you blow in air.
Ended up scratching the pistons to get them out with pliers. Now I know why they sell the repair kits with 4 new pistons.
Its almost impossible to get all 4 brake pistons out of this 4 pot caliper with out damaging the pistons.
I prefer the old 2 piston brembos like the rear brake on this LT. The dust seal on the 4 pot is very tight, gets dirty and gets tighter.
regards,
Jerome in Portland Oregon
A week later and I have overcome the challenge. I did not want to split the calipers and splitting would not have solved the problem of getting a stuck piston out. OSHA has limited the pressure in air blow guns to 30 psi so i used a tire chuck and an old air valve to get a good shot of pressure into the caliper and move one more piston out. Another piston would not budge so I resorted to the nuclear option: broke out the plastic center of piston and epoxied in a short bolt, after epoxy set up I had something to grab, twist and pull to remove the last piston. Epoxied bolt can only protrude about 1/4 inch or you wont get the piston out after it is free.
Motorworks web page recommends not splitting these calipers and you dont have to split them to rebuild, it just makes cleaning bores a little harder. I sawed off a toothbrush head to get in the piston bores to clean.
Hope this helps someone get the job done quicker.
Now to replace caliper bolts that previous owner could not use the correct size allen wrench on
Jerome in Portlanld
Last edited by attitude on Sun Jul 18, 2021 11:05 am; edited 1 time in total (Reason for editing : solved the problem)