Brakes after I bleed them or change the pads haven’t always received the attention from me that they should. Recently I purchased a Suzuki TL1000s and decided to upgrade the front brakes. I purchased a pair of six piston calipers and larger master cylinder off of eBay. The calipers were pretty gummed up so I decided to completely rebuild them with new seals and pistons. The job was pretty straightforward and went well without any issues. While the calipers were apart I decided to have them powder coated Lollipop red. Anyway this got me thinking about the V-Max. I put on a set of Sumitomo 6 piston calipers when I built the bike somewhere around 2015 the seller said the worked fine but could not verify if they had ever been serviced. I put them on the bike with new pads and a 17mm radial master cylinder and they worked great. Last summer I noticed the brakes were less than impressive and didn’t bite like they once did. After I did the Suzuki brakes it made me think I should also do the V-Max as well and also take the opportunity to powder coat them as well. Long story short the pistons in the left caliper were completely stuck and would not budge with regular force on the master cylinder. I removed the pads while still on the bike and pumped the brake lever to push the pistons out as far as I could to make removing them easier but the left ones would not budge. I pulled the calipers off and tried forcing the pistons out with 120lbs of compressed air. I managed to get them to come out far enough to grab them with vice grips and pull them out knowing that they would get trashed and need replacement. I managed to get all the seals and new pistons installed and now it works better that I ever remember. I had the V-Max calipers powder coated Lollipop blue.
Moral of the story brakes need love too.View attachment 96396View attachment 96397View attachment 96398
Moral of the story brakes need love too.View attachment 96396View attachment 96397View attachment 96398
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