Just to confirm here. The bike concerned has two calipers and each caliper has 2 ?? pistons--one on each side?
If so they are the exact same setupas on the XJ series (600/750/900)
Repeating the advice offered above a fair bit but there is a step by step process
1) Get a clean cloth and wipe both disks.--Is there a really thin layer grey sticky crap on em?, Look at the back of the brake calipers and see if its black and oily looking-not wet--baked on kinda oily.. -if so and the forks are not leaking then they have been in the past and both calipers need a bloody big cleanup.fork oil is on the disks and in the pads
2)Undo the bolt holding the brake lever and remove the lever. -clean up the pivot point and the bolt shaft then very lightly lube with hmp grease _not enough to seep anywhere.--reassemble.
3) remove ONE caliper --remove the brake pad slide pins --they will be rusty looking and/or covered in crud.Sand them with 400 grit sandpaper till shiney metal again. again lube the pins lightly with HMP grease.
4)Caliper wise Im seriously loath to recomend to a person of unknown mechanical experience about popping pistons out
But a really good huck out with brakeclean will make a difference.--basicly spray everything you see with brakeclean and scrub away till it looks shiney again. That also applies to the pads and disk.
put the pin/pads back in and caliper back on.--DON'Tforget the little retaining clips
-repeat the other side.
You'll know youve done it right with an older bike because the brakes feel spongey as heck-compared to what they were but stop a heap better
If what i suggested doesnt work then gimme a yell and one saturday you can come here and Ill show you how to dothe pistons
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