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I had warped front rotors so replaced them and the pads at the same time. ~2000 miles later my pads are completely gone. WTF? Are my brakes not releasing? That might explain why my stock rotors warped (overheated). What would cause such a problem and how do I go about diagnosing/fixing it? I'm at a complete loss on this one ...
2006 GSXR 750
EBC - Pro-Lite Contour Front Brake Rotors
Galfer - Brake Pads
Do you ride covering the brake handle? You might just be putting just enough pressure on it to have them rub.
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bad - dirty calipers. You might need to replace the seals (rebuild) and clean the pots (are they junked up).
BTW - that is my best guess. Could be a damaged MC (crashed lately?)
Last edited by wookie; 07-28-08 at 10:25 PM.
2006 Triumph Speed Triple - Street
2003 R6 - Track
2000 SV650 - Street/Track
That's right, back to a 2 cylinder, 3 cylinder, and a 4 cylinder.
Cheese, I'd start with lifting the front of the ground and rolling front wheel. See how it is turning around. Normally you should have some resistance/brake pad touching just a bit on rotors, but you should still be able to turn the wheel around a couple times with one good roll. If the pads are catching on rotors too much, the wheel should stop spinning much sooner.That would mean the calipers need some cleaning or rebuild as they're not pushing back enough when you let of brakes. Who did your brakes? Is there a spring/ clip in between pads pushing them apart?
Last edited by nerijusj; 07-28-08 at 09:47 PM.
ZX10R
Ned
what type of galfer pads are they? race compound pads tend to go away fairly fast. though 2K seems a bit silly.
other than that i would agree with everyone else that your calipers may just need a good cleaning.
The front wheel spins a few rotations and there's the expected whining of the pads touching the rotors. Everything sure seems fine on the stand, but damn these pads chewed up quick. I'll take a better look at the calipers. Can I use something like engine degreaser on them or will that be too harsh on the seals?
My only crash was a low side 6-8K miles ago. The front end never contacted anything to my knowledge. Just slipped down the road on it's side.
I'm not positive the cause is from rubbing. I've just never gone through pads this fast before and that was my uneducated guess.
I replaced the pads myself. No springs that I remember, just two bolts to hold the caliper on and two bolts that loosely hold the pads in place.
Thanks to all that have helped so far and please keep the suggestions coming ...
oh nvm... read it wrong.
"fuckit!"
What if you prop up the front wheel on stands, squeeze the front brake lever, release, then spin the wheel. It should spin freely once the front brake is released. If there's some resistance and then frees up, then that might be a sign the pistons are dirty.
You also could be chasing your tail. I had a set of brake pads wear out way under what I thought they should have for mileage. I checked EVERYTHING and found NOTHING. Replaced them and the next set lasted what I thought they should have. I chocked it up to bad pads.
Do the test when brakes are hot not cold
Usually dragging stuff would just wear out 1 pad a lot or 1 side.
Chance there is air in the system. WHen you pushed the
pistons back in sometime there is corrosion. Also the retraction is only
the distortion of the seal (o ring) not much force...
clean polish replace seals... Note life easier if pistons are put in
with a fluid in the caliper 1st.
Glen Beck is John the Baptist
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too much brake fluid in reservoir upon replacment
2001 RC51!!!
2007 Husky SMR 510 - no longer... blown tranny