After the problems I had getting the lockheed booster apart, I had another problem crop up with the disc brake calliper.
Now everyone who has rebuilt their callipers has crossed this bridge, I have done so four times so far.
Usually however, it has been on a reasonably fair condition set of callipers and not on a pair of rusted barnicles from below the Devonport high tide mark.
Usually i use a master cylinder attached to a pedal box to remove the calliper piston, but i didn't have this luxury. It takes a lot of fiddling around to jury rig up a pedal box, master cylinder (working) and mount it on something so you can get some leverage into it. Both callipers simply laughed at my crappy amateurish efforts when i tried to cram 120 PSI from a compressor into their blow holes. So I had to try something a little harsher to teach 'em a goddamed lesson about ambition and ability.
Once again as per the booster, I slipped a grease gun over the bleed nipple fitting from the very same calliper (these are bigger than the drum brake nipples so fit nicely into a standard grease gun) and used the grease gun's pressure to remove the lower piston.
As the upper piston has a very handy hole behind it to allow me to drift the piston out mechanically, I simply used a crappy G clamp to hold this one in place. Allow this one to fall out and you will be left with no pressure leverage to get the lower piston out.
It worked so well that it was all over in 5 minutes for the pair of callipers and in pieces ready to be blasted, cleaned, rebuilt and painted.
It beats dealing with the setting up of a master cylinder, bleeding the system up and trying to get the pressure in there. Grease guns put the grease in and don't let it out again, so one pump = one movement of the piston. There's no arguement the piston can put up except "ok mister, I'll move.."
If I had walked in there from out of the blue, grabbed a calliper and a grease gun I would have been in and out in under 10 minutes. Much nicer way of rebuilding a calliper.
***CAVEAT*** Do not use this method on ANY brake component rubber parts you will use again. Mineral based oils and greases swell rubber and will ruin your brakes (potentially on the road!). i will be thouroughly cleaning my callipers out, blasting, degreasing in petrol and then again in metholated spirits (which does not bother brake components) before refitting ALL new seals. This is not for a half job calliper repair.
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