xwhatsit
15th September 2007, 15:01
Wei wei,
Went and bought an impact driver today, as I have a few rusty screws and seized this and that on the RS. Picked up some brake fluid as well, as the front brakes look a little low on hydraulic fluid.
The master cylinder cover, held in by four screws, did look a little rusty, so I took the impact driver straight to it. Got two screws off, but the two other diagonal ones are stuck as stuck can be. All the impact driver does is gouge the heads out of them.
I could drill them out, but I do have a spare master cylinder. The brake light switch in my existing master cylinder is pretty fucked, and is araldited up; the brake light switch in the spare master cylinder (from the domestic Japan model) is a different design, and I was able to dismantle and recondition it quite well (green copper, yuck) until it worked on the multimeter.
Now, ideally I'd love to stick a TLS drum on the front, but every time I mention this everybody flames me, apart from old miscreants like Ixion.So, I need to know whether my ancient spare master cylinder would be a good idea to put on. It has been sitting in a box, away from hydraulic fluid for a good 15-20 years; do seals and stuff dry out and stop doing their job? I pumped some tap water through it, it didn't seem to leak from anywhere and made a wonderful high-pressure spray when I held my thumb over the end.
Do I need to recondition this with new bits and bobs, or can I stick it straight on and just bleed the lines?
Went and bought an impact driver today, as I have a few rusty screws and seized this and that on the RS. Picked up some brake fluid as well, as the front brakes look a little low on hydraulic fluid.
The master cylinder cover, held in by four screws, did look a little rusty, so I took the impact driver straight to it. Got two screws off, but the two other diagonal ones are stuck as stuck can be. All the impact driver does is gouge the heads out of them.
I could drill them out, but I do have a spare master cylinder. The brake light switch in my existing master cylinder is pretty fucked, and is araldited up; the brake light switch in the spare master cylinder (from the domestic Japan model) is a different design, and I was able to dismantle and recondition it quite well (green copper, yuck) until it worked on the multimeter.
Now, ideally I'd love to stick a TLS drum on the front, but every time I mention this everybody flames me, apart from old miscreants like Ixion.So, I need to know whether my ancient spare master cylinder would be a good idea to put on. It has been sitting in a box, away from hydraulic fluid for a good 15-20 years; do seals and stuff dry out and stop doing their job? I pumped some tap water through it, it didn't seem to leak from anywhere and made a wonderful high-pressure spray when I held my thumb over the end.
Do I need to recondition this with new bits and bobs, or can I stick it straight on and just bleed the lines?