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I backed off the bolt that the lever rests on when not in use. It seemed to have worked on the front caliper but not the rear. One other thing I forgot about, the rear caliper has a missing bleeder nipple. Both pistons seem to move freely (closed at least).Should I just pony up and buy the new caliper or is there a test I can do on the propotioning valve?
Quote from: czakky82 on April 07, 2019, 09:42:44 AMOk I’m an idiot. After actuating the master a million times I took off the cover on the caliper. Definitely not enough shim in there.... You lost me there. First off, there are no shims in the caliper. With the cover off you'll see the alignment pins, a spring clip, and the pads attached to their metal backing plates. It sounds like the brakes aren't dragging anymore but I haven't a clue what happened...
Ok I’m an idiot. After actuating the master a million times I took off the cover on the caliper. Definitely not enough shim in there....
Could my valves have tightened up that much after the fresh gillardoni kit? It’s probably less than 100 mikes and maybe four heat cycles.
Have you retorqued the heads and adjusted the valves any since installing the Gilardoni kits? In my experience, you need to do that very often in the 1000 miles or so, until the gaskets finally finish compressing completely. I usually: assemble the top-end, torque the head nuts, but leave the rockers off. Next day, retorque, install rockers, set valve lash. Start engine and run 15-20 minutes, let cool completely back to ambient temp, retorque, adjust valves again. 5 heat/cool cycles - retorque again and adjust valves. 500 miles - ditto. 1000 miles ditto. Then it should be settled in.
I was thinking water in the gas. If re-torquing and adjusting valves doesn't fix, pop the float bowls and look for water in the gas.