johnnyrod
01-07-10, 02:18 PM
The other "rubber grease" thread got me thinking... do you use it on your calipers or not?
I've never used it ever, and as far as I know, it hasn't made any difference to how often I've had to strip and clean the brake calipers of mine or other peoples' bikes. I've always used some brake fluid to get the pistons back in then wiped off any left on the outside. Other people will swear blind that if you don't put rubber grease on they'll seize up at the first sniff of salt. My only experience of it was having to sort out two bikes' front brakes (GSXR600 and 750, both SRADs) which had been serviced by the same dealer, and both had grease on them. Both had a problem of excess lever travel which seemed to be due to the pistons getting sucked back in to the calipers too far. Cleaning the grease off fixed it but that might be coincidental.
So, what do you reckon? Is it essential, nice to have, or worse than useless? I've seen to many brakes in my time but I'm never too old to learn something better.
I've never used it ever, and as far as I know, it hasn't made any difference to how often I've had to strip and clean the brake calipers of mine or other peoples' bikes. I've always used some brake fluid to get the pistons back in then wiped off any left on the outside. Other people will swear blind that if you don't put rubber grease on they'll seize up at the first sniff of salt. My only experience of it was having to sort out two bikes' front brakes (GSXR600 and 750, both SRADs) which had been serviced by the same dealer, and both had grease on them. Both had a problem of excess lever travel which seemed to be due to the pistons getting sucked back in to the calipers too far. Cleaning the grease off fixed it but that might be coincidental.
So, what do you reckon? Is it essential, nice to have, or worse than useless? I've seen to many brakes in my time but I'm never too old to learn something better.