Hi All,
I've been having a problem with my 2007 Blackbird for some time, which meant I've basically had it laid up for the past year (as well as something to do with new babies requiring even more maintenance than a bike). However, I spent some time experimenting with it today, and wanted to run my conclusions through a sanity check with someone out there before I act.
The problem is, the front brakes are stuck on. Not too tight - I can rotate the front wheel with my hand with thumb and three fingers - but it won't spin freely at all. It's bad enough that when I took it to the mechanics, there was a fine coating of brake dust on the front wheel by the time I'd driven the 10 miles.
I've already spent $700 at the mechanic for him to replace the front pistons, which were moderately corroded, and which he thought was the problem. Trouble is, it wasn't... the problem remains.
So - today I spent some time bleeding the brakes, bleeding pressure, and trying to find a pattern.
First thing: rear brake seems fine. I can give the rear wheel a shove through 1-2 rotations freely, and it has the drag of the chain and sprockets as well.
I pumped the front brake, then tried bleeding each of the front bleed valves. The middle valves on left and right (that are fed from the rear brake system) had no residual pressure when opened, so all fine. However, I found that the top valve on both left and right slowly pushed out another 3-4cm of fluid from what I assume is residual pressure in the front brake lever system, over around a 20 second period. So something is 'pushing back', but very very slowly - not as a burst. If I pumped the front brake lever, it pushed out another 3-4cm immediately.
Once that pressure was released, then the front wheel was easier to turn. Still not free - not by a long shot - but I could turn it with thumb and forefinger with a bit of effort.
So... I"m trying to figure out whether this is a 'back pressure', and if so, where it's coming from. I read this thread, particularly TigreST's contribution, and his comments about the 'mung' make me suspect the caliper piston rubber seals - that maybe the 'mung' is holding the pads against the brakes, and then also applying some back pressure against the pistons and fluid, which is released when I open the bleed value... but still leaves some pressure against the disc.
So - if correct, the fix for this would be to firstly ask my mechanic whether he did or didn't spot this, and can he sort it at a very reasonable rate considering he missed it (he's a Blackbird specialist and owns some himself), or alternatively, to pull it apart, buy the Dremel, and try it myself.
Any thoughts? Anything else it could be?
Thanks!
Damo
I've been having a problem with my 2007 Blackbird for some time, which meant I've basically had it laid up for the past year (as well as something to do with new babies requiring even more maintenance than a bike). However, I spent some time experimenting with it today, and wanted to run my conclusions through a sanity check with someone out there before I act.
The problem is, the front brakes are stuck on. Not too tight - I can rotate the front wheel with my hand with thumb and three fingers - but it won't spin freely at all. It's bad enough that when I took it to the mechanics, there was a fine coating of brake dust on the front wheel by the time I'd driven the 10 miles.
I've already spent $700 at the mechanic for him to replace the front pistons, which were moderately corroded, and which he thought was the problem. Trouble is, it wasn't... the problem remains.
So - today I spent some time bleeding the brakes, bleeding pressure, and trying to find a pattern.
First thing: rear brake seems fine. I can give the rear wheel a shove through 1-2 rotations freely, and it has the drag of the chain and sprockets as well.
I pumped the front brake, then tried bleeding each of the front bleed valves. The middle valves on left and right (that are fed from the rear brake system) had no residual pressure when opened, so all fine. However, I found that the top valve on both left and right slowly pushed out another 3-4cm of fluid from what I assume is residual pressure in the front brake lever system, over around a 20 second period. So something is 'pushing back', but very very slowly - not as a burst. If I pumped the front brake lever, it pushed out another 3-4cm immediately.
Once that pressure was released, then the front wheel was easier to turn. Still not free - not by a long shot - but I could turn it with thumb and forefinger with a bit of effort.
So... I"m trying to figure out whether this is a 'back pressure', and if so, where it's coming from. I read this thread, particularly TigreST's contribution, and his comments about the 'mung' make me suspect the caliper piston rubber seals - that maybe the 'mung' is holding the pads against the brakes, and then also applying some back pressure against the pistons and fluid, which is released when I open the bleed value... but still leaves some pressure against the disc.
So - if correct, the fix for this would be to firstly ask my mechanic whether he did or didn't spot this, and can he sort it at a very reasonable rate considering he missed it (he's a Blackbird specialist and owns some himself), or alternatively, to pull it apart, buy the Dremel, and try it myself.
Any thoughts? Anything else it could be?
Thanks!
Damo