Author |
Message |
Sprintex
| Posted on Tuesday, July 25, 2017 - 11:46 am: |
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Before changing out the fork seals I tried cleaning them with the tool made for that. Anyway so far so good. I clean the rotor and pads with brake cleaner and still not stopping well. does the oil soak into the EBC pads? I think they are the HH. |
Natexlh1000
| Posted on Tuesday, July 25, 2017 - 11:53 am: |
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Technically, you have to chuck them if they are contaminated. The pads are generally porous and therefore able to soak up solvents and lubricants. My X1 leaked all over its front brakes and I had no luck getting them back to normal. |
Sprintex
| Posted on Tuesday, July 25, 2017 - 12:19 pm: |
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Rats, they don't have a lot of miles. |
Ourdee
| Posted on Tuesday, July 25, 2017 - 01:16 pm: |
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Lousy braking, not the place to cheap out. |
Sprintex
| Posted on Tuesday, July 25, 2017 - 09:43 pm: |
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I know, would not think of not getting new pads. Still steps better then my 74 Guzzi with 4 LS drum on the front though. |
Etennuly
| Posted on Wednesday, July 26, 2017 - 11:27 am: |
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If you can see soaked in fluid hit them with a body shop grinder using smooth arcing strokes to cut them down evenly. Grind them until you have clean dry surface. I have done this a couple of times with good success. The oil soaked only about a 64th of an inch. Try hand sanding with 80 grit on a hand block sander. That works also. |
Hughlysses
| Posted on Wednesday, July 26, 2017 - 02:13 pm: |
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If you do get them clean by grinding or chemical cleaning, you have to pretty much re-bed them like new brake pads before they'll feel normal. |
Hugie03flhr
| Posted on Tuesday, August 01, 2017 - 12:33 pm: |
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I had a Honda Shadow I got fork oil on the brakes. If it's soaked in you have to replace the pads. If you rode it and worked it into your rotor, I would replace that too. I tried cleaning, grinding and chemically treating my brakes and never got the performance back until I replaced everything. |
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