2005 Stella Master Cylinder Binding
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2005 Stella Master Cylinder Binding
I searched all over the forums but could not find anything related to my problem.
Last week I was backing my 2005 Stella into the garage when I
noticed it was hard to move. Discovered the front wheel was
locked. At first I thought the brake pads were sticking, but
later discovered the piston on the caliper master cylinder
was not fully returning, thus keeping the pads against the rotor.
I tried several times to push it in and pry it out in hopes of
freeing it up. No luck. I called ScooterWest and talked to Max.
He did not stock a rebuild kit of any kind for the stella, and
all the brake caliper assemblies were for diff bikes.
Any ideas??
Last week I was backing my 2005 Stella into the garage when I
noticed it was hard to move. Discovered the front wheel was
locked. At first I thought the brake pads were sticking, but
later discovered the piston on the caliper master cylinder
was not fully returning, thus keeping the pads against the rotor.
I tried several times to push it in and pry it out in hopes of
freeing it up. No luck. I called ScooterWest and talked to Max.
He did not stock a rebuild kit of any kind for the stella, and
all the brake caliper assemblies were for diff bikes.
Any ideas??
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- Location: Santa Barbara, CA
If it were me, I'd first try bleeding the system to see if I could move the piston when releasing pressure from the system. If that didn't work, I'd probably completely empty the system and then see what I could do. If it were still stuck, I'd call scooterworks. I imagine they sell the calipers, even if they're not on the website.
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- az_slynch
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Re: 2005 Stella Master Cylinder Binding
Loosen the caliper mounting bolts. Swing the caliper bracket out and pull out the the pad retention pin. Remove the pads. Use a C-clamp to slowly press the caliper piston back in fully. Consider replacing the brake pads if they're thin; if the caliper piston has to extend out too far, that can cause it to get cocked in the bore and bind. Be sure to put the pad retaining back in correctly. Tapered end goes in towards the rim. Bolt the caliper back on the mount, using blue Loctite. Actuate the brake lever to seat the pads on the rotor. Open the brake reservoir and top up the fluid level...might consider bleeding the front brake completely for more positive brake operation.lorenajack wrote:I searched all over the forums but could not find anything related to my problem.
Last week I was backing my 2005 Stella into the garage when I
noticed it was hard to move. Discovered the front wheel was
locked. At first I thought the brake pads were sticking, but
later discovered the piston on the caliper master cylinder
was not fully returning, thus keeping the pads against the rotor.
I tried several times to push it in and pry it out in hopes of
freeing it up. No luck. I called ScooterWest and talked to Max.
He did not stock a rebuild kit of any kind for the stella, and
all the brake caliper assemblies were for diff bikes.
Any ideas??
At what point does a hobby become an addiction? I'm uncertain, but after the twelfth scooter, it sorta feels like the latter...
Seriously...I've lost count...
Seven mopeds ...that's still manageable...
Seriously...I've lost count...
Seven mopeds ...that's still manageable...
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- az_slynch
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- Location: Tucson, AZ
Howard needed new brake pads last year, just prior to Scooter Fiesta IV. His bike was dragging the pads on the rotor and was making metal-on-metal contact. The rotor was OK, but I did lightly sand the surface to address any high spots or burrs. His caliper needed a C-clamp to press it back in. All sliding surfaces were cleaned, polished and lightly greased with high-temp brake grease. Afterwards, I bled the full system since his fluid was almost completely contaminated (almost a black as used engine oil). Worked great afterwards.
At what point does a hobby become an addiction? I'm uncertain, but after the twelfth scooter, it sorta feels like the latter...
Seriously...I've lost count...
Seven mopeds ...that's still manageable...
Seriously...I've lost count...
Seven mopeds ...that's still manageable...
- viney266
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Open the reservoir cap on the handlebar. squeeze lever, when you release it there should be a small "spurt" of fluid from a tiny hole in the bottom of the reservoir. If no spurt you found your problem...clean hole add fresh fluid see if that fixes it. It is a pressure bleed off.
Speed is only a matter of money...How fast do you want to go?
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- jimmbomb
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