Sticking MR2 front brake caliper

Sticking MR2 front brake caliper

Author
Discussion

the t boy

Original Poster:

782 posts

246 months

Tuesday 29th November 2005
quotequote all
Bit of advice needed please guys.

I replaced the nsf caliper on the MR2 last year as a piston had seized up completely. The osf one is now showing the same symptoms and I need to get it sorted asap.

Is the only solution to replace the caliper or are there some other things I can do to permanently free it up? I'm tempted to go the no-hassle route of just chucking a new caliper on but if there is a cheaper, effective alternative I'll give it a go.

T

MrFlibbles

7,706 posts

289 months

Tuesday 29th November 2005
quotequote all
A recon caliper is easiest.

aldi

9,243 posts

243 months

Tuesday 29th November 2005
quotequote all
I did manage to free mine up for nowt, basically get it allmost all the way out (I did it by using a big socket to wedge the free one in place and giving a few pumps on the pedal). Slide the seal up the piston so you can see the corrosion/whatever on the piston surface... if it's restricted to the area not swept by the seal then I think you're OK to clean it up and put it back together with a squirt of WD. Otherwise just replace the piston & seal and bleed. I used www.brakesinternational.co.uk/ a few times, they are OK and sell individual pistons, seals, rebuild kits etc. There was some info about a discount code for them on www.imoc.co.uk as well but that was a while ago...

Obligatory disclaimer: If you crash into a bus load of nuns it's not my fault!


Edit: Just checked the brakesint site, looks like they've stopped doing individual bits since I last looked

>> Edited by aldi on Tuesday 29th November 16:38

d-man

1,019 posts

251 months

Tuesday 29th November 2005
quotequote all
I serviced the front calipers on an MR2 a couple of months ago, got the seal kits from Brakes International and cleaned the pistons up with a rag and brake fluid. All the dust boots were split and the pistons had got choked with brake dust and had some surface rust which was easily removed. Slightly time consuming, but a lot cheaper than recon calipers Oh the brakes on the car have been fine since and it passed its MOT today.

Edit to say find the correct caliper in the Brakes International shop and then click the associated items button to see the seal / service kits I just used the £7 ones as the sliders seemed fine, was just the dust boots splitting that caused the problem.

>> Edited by d-man on Tuesday 29th November 23:11

speedtwelve

3,521 posts

279 months

Thursday 1st December 2005
quotequote all
I had a seized front caliper on my MRT. The piston looked OK, so I wound it back in, but realised the caliper sliders were dry and seized in place. Cleaned them and lubed them with aircraft-spec copper grease. That was 5K miles ago and I've had no problems since.

ST

the t boy

Original Poster:

782 posts

246 months

Friday 2nd December 2005
quotequote all
Fensport are fresh out of calipers and won't have any in for a month so I will spend Saturday giving it a good going over to get things moving again. I tried the same method with the other side but it never lasted more than a few days before seizing up again but if I can get it to last a month then can get a replacement.

Can anyone recommend a supplier of decent reconditioned kit other than Fensport? Not sure I want to keep riding the bike in this weather - it's just too scary.

MrFlibbles

7,706 posts

289 months

Friday 2nd December 2005
quotequote all
I know Rogue Systems do them on an exchange basis.

www.roguesystems.co.uk/forms/Product.aspx?ID=336

aldi

9,243 posts

243 months

Friday 2nd December 2005
quotequote all
the t boy said:
Fensport are fresh out of calipers and won't have any in for a month so I will spend Saturday giving it a good going over to get things moving again. I tried the same method with the other side but it never lasted more than a few days before seizing up again but if I can get it to last a month then can get a replacement.

Can anyone recommend a supplier of decent reconditioned kit other than Fensport? Not sure I want to keep riding the bike in this weather - it's just too scary.


www.brakesinternational.co.uk/

the t boy

Original Poster:

782 posts

246 months

Tuesday 6th December 2005
quotequote all
Thanks for all the advice. Popped the piston out, gave everything a bit of a rub down, stuck it back together and its as good as new.

(Until next week probably)