ZXR Brake caliper refurbishment Part 3 rear brake

Rear caliper time;

I thought the rear brake was perfect as it seemed to work well. On removing the rear wheel to replace the cush drive, I tested the rear caliper just to make sure all was good and discovered that there was no movement on the inboard piston, whereas the outside piston was moving freely. Having seen the mess in the front calipers I took the opportunity to order the relevant seals and bite the bullet to refurbish this at the same time. I thought the inboard piston might be seized and was hoping that I wouldn’t require a new piston!

First things first, caliper removed and cleaned up with diesel. Like the front calipers, the exposed part of the pistons were in good order, more crud on them than the front but the diesel shifted it easily.

All cleaned up ready for strip down…

Splitting the caliper, what was immediately apparent was the state of the fluid galleries where the caliper halves join.

It didn’t take long to figure out why the inboard piston wouldn’t budge…the gallery was plugged solid. Even chipping away with a screwdriver was struggling to shift it and compressed air didn’t touch it.

The only thing that did was a 2mm drill bit which I turned by hand…

This had been the reason for the piston not moving. As it turned out, both pistons were perfect and all the seals were even in good order. The fluid was a bit of a mess with a fair amount of bits in it.

The old seals were removed, the bores and pistons cleaned out and the replacement parts all laid out…

The new seals were smeared with red rubber grease to ease fitment as per the workshop manual.

Pistons were fitted with some brake fluid to slip them in…

O seal inserted, again with red rubber grease, positioned and caliper joining bolts were subsequently tightened down to correct torque, 32nm.

The old pad sliding pins and springs were cleaned up…

Pads installed with ceramic grease applied to the rear of the pad backing plates and sliding pins…

New seals were fitted to the control arm bearing housing

and finally, all bolted up and bled ready to go. This bled up surprisingly easily…

Rear brake reservoir is located behind the rear bodywork;

Topped off and ready to go…

So that is the brakes all done. Front and rear with goodrich braided hoses and EBC HH Sintered pads all round and fresh Silkolene Maintain fluid.

I’m hoping this should be a totally different beast now on the braking front! The rear caliper should now have twice the power and the fronts should also be functioning as intended.

ZXR Brake caliper refurbishment Part 1

As expected of a bike that has been static for 24 years, there will likely be an element of recommissioning required.

On purchase, the brake and clutch lines were replaced with black Goodrich hoses to retain the stock look, new Pirelli Rosso III tyres and refreshed fluid. The engine was treated with Millers competition running in oil and fresh fuel had her fire up right away.

I had my reservations regarding brakes and front fork oil seals. The latter has been fine so far, the brakes on the other hand, while seemingly working fine, have had underwhelming performance. Of course it’s hard to know what normal should be but I can’t believe it would be this poor judging by the rest of the bikes capabilities.

After the first 500 mile running in stint it has become obvious that all is not well with the front brake setup. There is some evidence that a pad is binding on the front disc. With the front wheel off the ground, spinning it by hand yields about 1.5 revolutions. Removing the left hand caliper extends that happily to 3.5 revolutions with a quick flick of the hand.

A caliper rebuild was therefore in order. I ordered up all genuine Kawasaki Seals and dust seals, O ring seals and some red rubber grease.

First up, the damage to the disc, it’s aesthetic really as it isn’t deep yet but would have become an issue. The first 500 mile bedding in at not more than 4k rpm is perfect for taking stock of what the bike needs in terms of recommissioning.

Splitting the caliper halves shows the pistons to be in excellent condition externally. There is no rust as expected seeing the bike had covered a mere 24 delivery miles (39kms) from new and had sat in a collection for the last 24 years until pressed back into light service by myself.

Closer inspection shows the dust seals are damaged, probably where they have been in the same position for many years then suddenly used. The larger piston dust seal had become deformed, likely causing the binding. The bore had some old residual brake fluid that had dried or congealed.

The piston itself showed a less healthy look to it’s internal face, which surprised me initially given the condition of the external face. A good clean with brake fluid and a toothbrush made everything better.

A closer look at the dust seal.

On removing the seals there is some congealed crud, old brake fluid mixed with light corrosion. This I guess pushes on the seal. The rear of the bore also has some dried(looks almost like baked on) brake fluid which is easily removed with some metal polish.

Congealed brake fluid featured in the galleries. Despite having new fluid with the fitment of the braided hoses, this is clearly historic gunk that a flush didn’t shift.

The pistons are generally in good order after a simple clean with brake fluid. The outer caliper half left hand piston has a tiny nick in it, which I later found out appears to be some form of corrosion eating at the piston. This is in a part of the piston which is not affected fortunately. This is commensurate with mild corrosion build up on the bore in the same location which has migrated onto the piston. It is however smooth.

The inner half of the left hand caliper…once again the pistons don’t look great on their inner portions but fortunately clean up well enough.

From this;

To this; With just the use of brake fluid.

and here is the corresponding outer half after clean up. Unfortunately the thin coating on the caliper was compromised through the use of brake cleaner and break fluid which gets everywhere. The finish went soft and despite trying to remove it quickly it has eaten in and started to lift the finish in areas.

Compounded later with the use of an air compressor.

The inner bores cleaned up well with some metal polish;

The inner side of the caliper had a spot with corrosion which had actually pitted the bore. Again not in an area of concern with regards to functionality but I’m pleased to have stripped these down to address bigger problems in the future.

A close up shows the pitting. Was it through moisture in the fluid that had built up where it hadn’t been changed in 24 years? I wonder what a regularly used ZXR caliper would look like, one which had had frequent fluid changes? This is to the inner half of the left hand caliper.

Onto the right hand caliper…a similar story…although this one in particular had a fair bit of corrosion going on in the larger piston bore between the seals…

Leaving its mark on the piston itself…similar to the piston above, except this one is in between the seals. All of the main fluid seals were perfect incidentally, however this one has corroded in between the dust seal and the main seal. Once again, fortunately this won’t affect performance since it is beyond the main seal.

Some metal polish cleaned it up but the pitting remains.

A close up of the corrosion in the bore…

All cleaned up with metal polish…again a little bit of pitting in one of the bores at the base of it, this time on the outer half of the right hand caliper.

This time no damage to the caliper finish. Using a red plastic plug where the brake hose would go (came with my new oberon clutch slave for another bike) it seems plugging the hole from fluid coming out has helped retain the finish. This one was cleaned down with diesel and detergent/water rather than brake cleaner for the most part.

Now I am in a position to rebuild except the damage to the finish of the left hand caliper means this will need to be sent away to be powder coated. This means they will receive an acid dip and be blasted before having the vital bits masked up prior to application of a 3 coat system. I will update this once this work is done and document the rebuild.

UPDATE

I have luckily managed to track down the discontinued piston to replace the pitted piston… 🙂

In other news, the rear caliper has one piston seized in it also on the inboard side, so this will also be under going the refurbishment treatment. All new seals have been ordered, hopefully the pistons will be ok!

Kawasaki ZXR 750R M1 Homologation

My 90’s dream bike. A ZXR750R M1 which was effectively the homologation special of the bike that took Scott Russell to Kawasaki’s first and only superbike championship world title (last century). Scott Russell and his ZXR were the underdog that triumphed over Carl Fogarty beating him to the riders championship and seeing off the other homologation specials such as the more expensive Honda RC45’s and Ducati’s in the process.

It has spent it’s life in a collection in Italy and never been registered. 39km only. It’s waiting to be registered and then fully recomissioned. I’ll have new tyres fitted to it (Pirelli Diablo Rosso III) and Goodrich braided brake and clutch hoses (probably with black teflon coat so they look stock). I’ll keep all the original parts safe. The rear shock was always criticised for being too hard, I’ll try it as is, if it is back breaking then Nitron do a 3 way shock and that would likely be it. Then I’ll just enjoy it for 200-300 miles a year on sunny Sundays.

I’ve always hankered after one since seeing my first ZXR in 1992, the first time I nearly bought one was in 2002. Since then I’ve come close a few times with an R but always talked myself out of them because of condition and what have you, every year they are getting scarcer and the condition is generally getting worse. With this, it’s a case of now or never because the way modern classics are going it won’t be long before it becomes totally out of reach. I figured I’ll be very unlikely to ever see an example like this again so time to bite the bullet. It’s not cheap but it looks like perfection to me, in my favourite colour too and it was one of the last of the ZXR750R’s!

Maiden voyage…first dead fly!