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Rebuilding clutch slave... again

Started by Skivvy, January 30, 2012, 02:33:43 AM

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Skivvy

Going through the 89 so I can drive it home and get it inspected.

Took the clutch master cyl and slave off the bike and brought them home. Just found the steel clutch slave piston is completely rusted inside where the seal goes. Supposedly this was just rebuilt by the previous owner at a bike shop. If they didn't remove the rust it was a pretty lame rebuild. Wondering if all the sanding is going to leave the bare metal finish to rust again?

Perhaps a new one from Yamaha (while they are still available) is the way to go. Took 20 some years to get this bad, maybe a new one will last another twenty.  :scratch_one-s_head:

Stripped the screw head on the master cylinder cover. Couldn't find the impact driver and tried to finesse it. Grrr.

Probably should helicoil the threads on both master cylinders and replace with stainless screws anyway. Just one more thing to r&r before I can ride it...

ribbert



Old brake fluid gets water in it. Once you have changed the fluid it should be fine.
"Tell a wise man something he doesn't know and he'll thank you, tell a fool something he doesn't know and he'll abuse you"

RichBaker

Rich Baker - NRA Life, AZCDL, Trail Riders of S. AZ. , AMA Life, BRC, HEAT Dirt Riders, SAMA....
Tennessee Squire
90 FJ1200, 03 WR450F ;8^P

Skivvy

So the screw threads were not frozen, just the head. Hmmm never anticipated that.

Once the head was removed with a countersink the screw came right out. Didn't want to try and drill out a steel screw stuck in aluminum anyway.

So now I'm wondering how to get the very last bit of air out of the clutch line? Right now the trans shifts so bad I dearly hope its not damaged from the abuse/neglect of previous owners. Please let it be air in the line...

grannyknot

Skivvy, a trick I learned from this forum to get the last little air bubbles out of the line is.
get a large syringe from a farm supply store, connect it to the bleed screw on the clutch slave unit with plastic hose, fill the syringe with fresh Dot 4 and back bleed the system. Air bubbles naturally want to rise anyway.
While your squeezing the syringe slowly pull in the clutch lever a few times to dislodge  any bubbles that are hiding in the M/C. I don't bleed any other way now.
84 Yamaha FJ1100L
82 Honda CB450T
70 Suzuki T500
90 BMW K75S

ELIMINATOR

What worked for me when I couldn't get all the air out. I pumped the piston a fair way out, while it was off the bike. Then with my thumbs, pushed it all the way back in. I nearly jumped when I saw out of the corner of my eye, this small fountain appear at the master cylinder.
BMW 1150GS
Moto Guzzi California 3