Sorry to hear the brake problem continues. Hopefully, your previous mechanic will get it fixed quickly.
??? Igofar, do you live in Germany? If yes - send me your adress!If not for covidmania, a round trip ticket and a couple of beers for Igofar would be cheaper at this point....
Good luck.
RT
Sadly, he lives in Arizona (sad for me and other easterners). Seriously, should you ever ship your bike to this side of the puddle and do a long tour of our country, plan to stop by Larry's. He is a professional mechanic and will go over your bike, repair whatever ails it, explaining as he works what he is doing. The education alone is worth the price of admission. More than a few guys have driven west on long trips and scheduled exactly this kind of repair session.??? Igofar, do you live in Germany? If yes - send me your adress!![]()
Let me see If I can explain it differently, so maybe you'll be able to understand my thoughts....I'm sorry Larry, I know you are the guru, but that doesn't make sense to me. By definition, there should be NO pressure on the pads from the caliper without the hydraulic pressure applied. If hydraulic pressure is applied and then released yet the pads remain engaged, and the wheel unable to rotate, the problem is most certainly in the caliper. Could be pistons, seals, slides, pads, misalignment, etc. But it cannot be the SMC, hoses, master, etc. They are no longer connected, there is no hydraulic pressure.
Now you may disagree with that, and I will respectfully agree to disagree and leave it right there.
RT
The delay valve acts on the front right centre piston. It 'delays' the application of that piston (and only that piston) until pressure from the brake pedal is sufficient to overcome a spring inside the delay valve. It is not a time delay, and it does not affect the left front centre piston. Nor does it delay the release of the pistons when the pedal is released. It is intended to prevent application of the rear brake pedal in slow speed manoeuvres from making the front end compress, by limiting the brake pedal to applying only the left hand front brake caliper (centre piston) when the pedal is pressed gently - yet applying both if more pressure is applied.So, what is between the main brake cylinder and the calipers? There is one thing called "delay valve". It was changed in 2004 ... Does anybody know what it delays?
Let me see If I can explain it differently, so maybe you'll be able to understand my thoughts....
When you have the OP apply pressure to lock things up, it does just that right? Applying the pressure may be allowing things like pistons, seals, slides, pads, clips, brackets, etc. to lock things up due to miss alignment etc. Now just because you crack the bleeder open, does not mean that you would be able to un-jam things (think crooked and wedged) Sometimes, when the pressure is released, if things are loose enough, it allows things to settle, or re-align themselves etc. However, most times with the brake calipers, stuck is stuck, and your pressure test may not identify the problem correctly.
Think of a clutch slave cylinder for example, if you've ever held one in your hands, and inserted the piston in the housing bore, it will glide in and out easily, but if you take just your fingertips and try and pull it out by just holding onto one side of it, it locks up tight as a drum, and you will not be able to move it at all. This shows you how minor the misalignment can be, and still cause issues.
Hope this helps.
If by repair you mean rebuild it, I suggest that you don't. More often than not it is reported that rebuilding it is not successful.it seems to be the secondary cylinder at the left fork which does not "give free". So we will repair this one a second time ...
It actually does come from the front, causing the rear brake to lock up.Here are the news. It is a bit complicated
First: All I wrote about my front-brake is still true. But: The total blocking of the brake does (in my case) not come from the front but from the rear-brake. I did not see that, because my mechanic always talked about the frontbrake (which really does not open good). And when the blocking happend, I did not see that its the backwheel blocked because I have a Wilbers-"Nivomat"-suspension which is a bit longer than the original one, so both wheels touch the street when the bike is on the middle-stand. So, the "heavy blocking" comes from the rear brake - and as we tested (by opening the hydraulic hoses at different spots), it seems to be the secondary cylinder at the left fork which does not "give free". So we will repair this one a second time ...
The Honda-specialist said, that the front-brake-opening in my case is "not really good but still acceptable". I will leave it and watch it. In case of my friend whom I talked about, this seems to be not true - his front brake does not open. The Honda-specialist said to him: Check the main-cylinder again.
This is an example, how easy it is, to run in a wrong direction - but systematic search can help a bit. It's too bad, that our "Honda-specialist" does not repair any more (he is over 70 years old) - but it was good to see, how systematically he checked the things.
Thanks for your input - and if you come to Germany - visit us.
Michael