Hi everyone Does anybody upgraded there front master cylinder and if so from what bike I'm only asking as I've changed my front pads and put braided lines on and fresh fluid in but we had trouble bleeding the front brakes so we cable tied the lever bar to the handle bars over a day and nite and the lever was lovely but now the lever has gone spongy again do the master cylinder has had it oh we rebuild the calliper aswell so we know it's ok. Can anyone recommend a master cylinder Cheers Chris
Out of interest, did you put a repair kit in the master cylinder? It is unusual for the master cylinder to give trouble. Are you sure there are no air leaks on the joints?
Also out of interest, why would you cabletie the lever to the handlebars and leave it overnight, when I bleed I just put some tubing on the bleed nipple, submerge it in some old brake fluid to stop air going back up and pump the leaver till the air stops coming out then lock the bleed nipple ?
How do you do it ?
Cheers
Steve
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2004 TTR250 - Highway Dirtbike Hand Guards, 38mm Bar Risers, D606 Front & Rear, Opened up Airbox with Twin Air Filter, Re-jetted Carby, B+B Bash Plate & Frame Guards, DIY 3mm Alloy Tail Tidy, 14/47 Gearing.
I tried a rubber band overnight on my kids quad when I couldn't get it to bleed, thought that maybe with air rising it would bleed out, didn't work at all, tried bleeding the usual way but there was so much air in the system I couldn't get it to compress enough to pump out the air. Ended up reverse bleeding from the caliper bleed nipple, used a 100ml syringe with a length of clear hose to see when the air had cleared the hose, worked brilliantly, you need to watch the Master cylinder for overflowing though. It looked to me like the air bubbles didn't have any problem rising through the brake fluid in the syringe so am confused as to how a normal bleed works, I have bled cars before and had bubbles come out, can anyone shed some light on what is happening.
Has anyone got a picture of the master cylinder plunger with the rubber seals correctly in place please? I've just rebuilt mine in what I thought was the logic way round and I cannot get any pressure whatsoever.
Sorry but I can't find any pics of the real thing - only this from the manual which I have edited:
Looking at the seal in a new kit, there "ridged" section should face into the cylinder such that it will open against the reservoir wall and seal when under pressure.
I have had a couple of front brakes that were a pain to bleed. Almost every refurb seems to have needed a new front brake hose hence I have done a few
It really takes a lot of pumping to move the air in the top loop of hose.
I tend to persuade/blackmail/bribe Trish to come and help as it can take a while to shift the air from the system.
To get a really solid brake after the basic bleeding, I leave the TTR overnight with the brake lever held in against the grip with a rubber band and that seems to allow the last few small air bubbles to escape the plunger.
I've found that unhooking the brake line and taking the caliper off the fork leg and putting on some suitable object with a bit of something holding the pads apart is the best way. Thereby straightening out the hoop in the line and letting the air get through. In fact, if the systems actually been apart, I doubt I'd manage to get it done any other way.
Before bleeding I take the caliper off and push the piston all the way in using a g-clamp (preferably one with plastic protectors). This is important because the piston can get an air-lock if it is pushed out as per when the brakes are bled (in other words-the piston will have pushed out a little once bled and the brake pads are seated).
I fill the master cylinder with dot 4 brake fluid (der of course). I then proceed to bleed the brake line by using the brake line bolt as the brake nipple IYKWIM. I do this until fluid leaks from the brake line. It will not leak much, just enough to notice it. This serves to bleed the brake line.
I then proceed to install the caliper and bleed the brakes as usual from the brake nipple.
This almost always works for me but in some cases I have had to take it for a ride on a rough surface to bleed the front brake. Waiting overnight sometimes works as Brian says with the lever held in with a cable tie.
This was taken from the manual and good to keep in mind-
Jarrah
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2000 TT-R250M-
Spoiler
Ported & polished, 73mm bore, Wizeco piston, US header pipe, FMF Q4, #150 main jet, #52.5 pilot jet, throttle stop screw adjusted, larger snorkel, GYT-R air filter, NGK Iridium spark plug, 14/51 gearing, NOS +
Got some brakes again. Used a big syringe to pull the fluid through the system and now have some pressure. Will leave the lever pulled to the bar overnight and then will rebleed tomorrow as I can still pull the lever just about back to the bar but looks better so far.
There's no issue with using dot 5.1 is there? I've never had a bike where I couldn't use it but thought I'd ask.
Anything to add on bleeding the rear brake line? Glad to hear I'm not the only one who has trouble getting all the bubbles out -- my current method, apparently, is (1) bleed incessantly, (2) wipe out, (3) bleed incessantly again, (4) wipe out, (5) bleed again ... 3 times now I've had to adjust the rear brake linkage mid-ride, each time it seems a horizontal dismount loosened up some bubbles or something and the rear brake got squishy. I was able to get most of the rear braking back by extending the travel on the brake lever so its not a complete brake failure and I don't think its the calipers. I keep thinking I've got a leak somewhere but can find no evidence of it. I disassembled the calipers and lubed, etc., a few weeks back when I first had the problem.
Perhaps I'm particularly unskilled at bleeding the rear line, like I'm always leaving a bubble in there and shifting 90 degrees lets it out? Or maybe when I drop the bike I'm losing something out the reservoir (suggesting a bad master cylinder, yuk)?
I could just stop dropping the bike, thought of that too.
The bike decided to take a nap on its right side and cracked the little see through window in the brake fluid reservoir. Has anyone had any luck replacing just the window or am I looking at a whole new reservoir part for this?
Hi. A previous owner has made a bit of a mess of the front master cylinder cover screws. Looks like I will need to drill the heads off. What size are the screws? Looking at the heads I'd guess at 4mm but I'd rather be sure I have some spares before I start. Never know, it might be some weird pitch? Not an urgent job but one for when I'd prefer to say indoors!
Cheers
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Life long rider. Currently the CCM 450, a GSA and a Guzzi Le Mans I've had since 1981. Sold the TTR September 2016.
Thanks Brian. I probably already have some appropriate screws but I could do with the size to be sure? If not I'll buy some when I next need some other bits n bobs.
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Life long rider. Currently the CCM 450, a GSA and a Guzzi Le Mans I've had since 1981. Sold the TTR September 2016.
The fluid reservoir has been leaking fluid through the sight glass,does anyone know which other reservoirs can be fitted? I've tried finding an original but they are like rocking horse poo apparently.
I think that when growing up, like a lot of boys, I loved taking things apart but maybe wasn't so good at putting them back together again. But it was a good way to learn how things are made.
So today I was looking at some front brake master cylinders that I had put back for refurbishing. One of these had a broken casting so was going in the bin but I couldn't resist trying to find out how the sight window was put together.
The window was really good and very clear. Older ones craze and go opaque. If I had known before that it was a push fit and sealed with an O ring then I might have been more careful in getting it out as I have another unit that ideally could do with a better window
Anyways up, just for fun, this is what it looks like stripped out!
PS I had a brainwave (rare event I know!). Mrs TTR is into making key rings and stuff using clear resin. I think I will dig the duff master cylinder out of the bin and see whether she can cast a resin sight glass into the case
My first attempt at a guide is here - http://ttr250.com/Front_master_cylinder_seals/TTR250-front_brake_master_cylinder_seal_replacement-how-to-guide.htm
As usual, comments, criticisms, spotting any omissions and suggestions for improvements appreciated!
Took a chance and bought an "18mm sight glass" from the universal shop.
(Just search ebay - there are thousands, all the same, just the prices vary!)
I was slightly skeptical of it working, but had to do something to stop the seepage.
Prised out the old plastic carefully without damaging the aluminium surround and cleaned it all up carefully, removing all the crud with a fairly sharp screwdriver.
I removed the inner ally baffle from the new sight glass (popped out easily, and I didn't want it)
Smeared the new o ring with flange sealant and pushed it in to the bottom of the seat, added more thin smears to the inner edge of the hole and the outer edge of the new glass. Popped it into the hole and tapped it in as far as it would go with a hammer and an appropriately sized socket.
Looks good. We'll see if it leaks later!
-- Edited by mossproof on Sunday 21st of June 2020 04:40:20 PM
-- Edited by mossproof on Sunday 21st of June 2020 04:42:05 PM
Slightly off the main topic of replacement but I may be headiong down that path
The sight glass window on a master cylinder was opaque so I tried polishing up the aged plastic with Solvol Autosol. It is now possible to see the level of fluid which I guess is all that is needed but the plastic is crazed. I was surprised how thin and flexible the window is.
Hello, everyone. I'm from Russia, I found your wonderful forum for fans of Yamaha TTR. I see you have this topic on the forum still lives. On our Russian forum, the communication of colleagues has recently stopped. Apparently after the transition of all in social messengers((. The question is whether the top covers of the main brake cylinder of Chinese production (aliexpress) are interchangeable with the original one (with the inscription yamaha)? As well as internal spare parts?
-- Edited by melPV on Sunday 8th of November 2020 01:30:36 AM
The GreyWulf forum and information pages were excellent. It is a shame if they are not going to continue
With regard to your question, all of the internal components are readily available (either genuine Yamah parts or AllBalls kits) through Totally TTRs and Yamaha parts suppliers so I doubt anyone has tried to swap parts but I am happy for an owner to prove me wrong
I am intrigued as to why you need a new cover. What has happened to yours?
I know it's an old thread but I merged a few similar threads and did a little bit of tidying up on it so maybe worth a bump!
According to the video mentioned earlier, the material referred to for use as a replacement sight glass is a disc of Lexan fixed in place with clear RTV sealant applied very thinly with a glue syringe. Didn't know there was such a thing as a glue syringe