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Post Info TOPIC: Don't go braking my heart!


Super Guru

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Don't go braking my heart!
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Sorry about the bad pun but I have spent a few hours this afternoon trying to sort out a TTR250 front brake master cylinder and it's sort of making me feel a bit hysterical cry

My mate Jim has a collection of shiny chromed up vintage(ish) Jap bikes and spends quite a bit of time fettling them and trying various improvements.

He read on a forum that the TTR250 front brake master cylinder was a good mod for his Yamaha XS650. Apparently the smaller bore of the TTR one works better than the original.

I had a couple of spare ones here that were waiting to be repaired and refurbished so dug them out for him to look at. Both of them were suffering from the common problem with rusted and seized cap bolts. The heads had been drilled off to allow the cap to be removed. That left the top of the offending threaded part exposed but not long enough to get a grip on it with pliers. The next best solution is to use a MIG welder to weld a washer on to the remains of the screw and turn it out using the washer. A photo of the welded on washer is pictured below to illustrate what I mean.

20171003_192439.jpg

 

It worked on three out of the four which can't be bad. Fortunately for Jim, both came out on the best master cylinder so that was the one we would use. This is how they look when unscrewed from the master cylinder reservoir.

20171003_192415.jpg

 

That problem solved, we then stripped out the piston to replace the seals etc using one of Steve's kits - see here

We installed the kit and then the lever to test it was working OK and that we had pressure. There was something odd in that the adjustable bolt on the different levers we tried just didn't seem long enough to reach the head of the piston assembly confuse

It was only after wasting about half an hour trying to figure out what the problem was that we noticed something disbelief

Do you spot anything wrong with our piston pictured below?

20171003_192616.jpg

 

Yep, it was about an inch shorter than it should be and, goodness knows how, the top of the piston that engages with the lever had been broken off evileye

This is what it should have looked like....

Front_brake_master_cylinder_piston.jpg

 

The break was so clean that we just didn't notice disbelief

Anyways up, we swapped out the piston and completed the rebuild and, hopefully, the job's a good 'un biggrinbiggrinbiggrin

Brian



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Super Guru

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good on y brian thats what our oldies are good at restorations

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