Jump to content

Help brake cylinder stuck while replacing pads what do I do now.


Vince70

Recommended Posts

I wonder if someone could give me some advice I decided it would be the ideal day to replace the rear pads on the Ronda 400 as money is a bit tight but I have plenty of free time so rather than take it to my trusty garage I thought I might as well have a go myself using my trusty halfords toolkit.

 

I've managed to disconnect the handbrake cable and remove the pin and disconnect the carrier and so I decided it would be a good idea to pump the brake pedal then take the lid off the brake fluid reservoir then lube the piston and push it back in.

 

Well this seems it didn't go to plan as the piston is now stuck solid and I've tried all kinds of hammers and screwdrivers and I'm not having any luck so I wondered if I'm doing something wrong, Also I can't undo the bleed nipple as that's rusted in solid and no amount of 10 or 11 MM. sockets or its imperial equivalent wants to fit on it as it seems that's knackered too.

 

Here's where I'm at.

 

post-9282-0-51078800-1508331638_thumb.jpeg

 

Also the brake pads are exactly the same size but the old ones have an extra bit of metal on the back.

I should of left it to the professionals and I'm not talking Bodie and Doyle.

post-9282-0-16965300-1508331989_thumb.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've tried turning it with a pair of mole grips but to no avail and I've got one of these things but it's too large for the caliper.attachicon.gifimage.jpeg

 

That looks the same as the tool I used.  The pins on one of the sides should fit.  Agree the discs look past their best but don't see why the caliper can't be cleaned up and re-used; assuming you can get the piston to move!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In my experience pistons with cut outs like yours or a hole for an Allen key in the middle do need winding back in as previously said. The piston also needs to be straight in the bore or it won't go back, it'll dig its heels in. As previously said may be LH or RH thread depending on the handbrake adjuster mech inside the caliper. Gently polish all the grot off the piston before pushing it back. When you put it back the tit on the back of the piston needs to be lined up with one recesses in the piston or you'll have a dragging brake.

My wind back tool looks like this, it lets you load piston as you rotate it.

 

s-l1600.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've cleaned up the piston as best as I could with some wet and dry and got the piston back in and it's turning nice and freely now.

But I think it looks like it needs a new caliper really so once I've got some money that's the first thing I'm going to do now.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

So is it a new caliper

 

I'd say so.

 

see if u can crack the bleed nipple before fighting to reassemble it then cant bleed it

 

This. I always loosen the bleed nipples first just so I know everything else I do isn't a complete waste of time.

 

If the bleed nipples refuse to move heat them up with a blowtorch then smother them in a wet cloth. I've found even French bleed nipples tend to pop out easily enough using this method.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As long as the bore appears to be in good condition, I would consider rebuilding it with a kit from ebay.    Including the piston, they're £15 - 20 a side vs ~£80 for a recon caliper.    Annoyingly, the kit doesn't include a bleed nipple - but they can't be much.

 

Take the opportunity to buy yourself a tin of red brake grease.   The man in the local motor factors (who don't stock it) told me that not many places will sell it because they'd rather you bought a recon caliper.   I was very impressed with how it transformed a seized caliper on my V70, so there might be a grain of truth in that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Maybe leave pressure on the brake pedal overnight? That way, if it has sunk during that time, you know its not sealing properly.

 

Reminds me of a post on the Rover 75 forum.

" in readiness for my upcoming MOT I pressed my clutch pedal for 30 minutes to see if it leaked"

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I always do a short distance emergency stop after brake work. Especially after I did the Zafira rear pads and forgot to bleed it through... Amy came back 5 minutes later pissed off as she nearly didn't stop for the first roundabout from our house. Ooops

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sounds like you've done an alright repair there. It will seal fine, there's a decent amount of tolerance in piston seals because they do move in and out and obviously go from freezing cold to very hot reasonably quickly. I always give the outside of any exposed piston a quick tickle with the old wet and dry, after all, 1000 even possibly 800 paper can still yield a good shine in paint after polishing so as long as you're not using 80 grit sandpaper I see no further issues.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I dry off any disturbed unions with brake cleaner and an airline / blue roll . Then start her up and hold pressure for 30 secs at least ( using an assistant or pedal holder ) . Then go round and look for any small weeps.

 

I do tend to give everything a glance after the test run to check it's all dry too, I'd forgot I do that till I read your post.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...