Home > Maintenance & Modifications > Brake Caliper Overhaul - Stainless Pistons |
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Retroanaconda Member Since: 04 Jan 2012 Location: Scotland Posts: 2635 |
Nice work.
An alternative method for fitting the outer dust seal and seal retainers that I used was to fit the main fluid seal, then lubricate and insert the piston so there's about 1/2" still sticking out. Then place the dust seal into the metal retaining ring and slide the resulting assembly over the exposed section of the piston down to meet the caliper. Using a large flat washer with the G-clamp you can then push home the piston, seal and retainer nice and easy in one motion. Having the piston in place keeps it all square. Genuine parts only for the seal kits, as you have suggested. |
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7th Apr 2016 7:52pm |
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Fatboy Slim Member Since: 04 Feb 2008 Location: Bridgend Posts: 1006 |
^^^^^^^ same as the way I do them works great.
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7th Apr 2016 8:01pm |
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Cetane Member Since: 27 Nov 2012 Location: Lancashire Posts: 171 |
Cheers for the tip. Will try it next time round.
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7th Apr 2016 8:08pm |
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YOLO110 Member Since: 14 Feb 2015 Location: Perth Oz and Stansted UK Posts: 1641 |
Thanks for the very comprehensive write up mate YOLO... You Only Live Once...
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7th Apr 2016 10:46pm |
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blackwolf Member Since: 03 Nov 2009 Location: South West England Posts: 17320 |
May I ask where you bought the stainless pistons, and are you satisfied with the quality of them?
Thanks! |
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8th Apr 2016 2:07pm |
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Cetane Member Since: 27 Nov 2012 Location: Lancashire Posts: 171 |
I cant remember where I got them. I had always heard good things about Zeus ones but they don't seem to do them anymore. I bought these last year and its been one of those jobs I'd been putting off until I overhauled the axle. What I can tell you is that they were boxed as EAC. I remember buying them as a 110 kit. They seem to be machined well, but the poof will be when they've been run on the LR for a bit. I cant see me getting it back on the road for a while yet, as I'm going through the entire drivetrain from the clutch to wheel nuts.
HTH Cetane PS Just had a quick Google.... Possibly these? http://www.shop4autoparts.net/Defender/Bra...f-110.html |
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8th Apr 2016 2:30pm |
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termohe Member Since: 23 Jul 2012 Location: De Pinte Posts: 15 |
I just split them, makes life a lot easier.
Bought the pistons from Paddock with oem sealings |
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8th Apr 2016 5:16pm |
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dorsetsmith Member Since: 30 Oct 2011 Location: South West Posts: 4554 |
17H8764L - BRAKE CALIPER INTERNAL SEALS RRC you will need there seal if you split them, not included in most rebuild kits 6 QTY for both front and rear split rebuilds
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8th Apr 2016 7:21pm |
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Merlin Member Since: 30 Oct 2010 Location: Newmarket Posts: 981 |
I used stainless steel pistons from Zeus:
http://www.zeus.uk.com/index.php About £107 posted, last year. Merlin |
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9th Apr 2016 12:46pm |
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Justtellme Member Since: 23 Nov 2015 Location: Ottawa Posts: 310 |
Is this part number good for front and rear calipers? Including later front calipers for td5 / puma? Thanks Patrick |
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5th Feb 2022 12:21am |
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The Zee Member Since: 26 May 2019 Location: Salisbury Posts: 289 |
Great write up.
As a Defender newbie and not that mechanically savie, I admit I had somebody do the refurbishment for me, using a set of lightly used take off calipers (both F&R) together a strip, blast and paint, but provided Zeus Engineering pistons. Zaid-M www.DefencePhotos.com 2014 Defender 110 Utility, 2.2 Puma, Indus Silver Not just transport more like a religion |
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5th Feb 2022 9:45pm |
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blackrock Member Since: 01 May 2022 Location: Hampshire Posts: 57 |
What I've done on other vehicles in the past is buy a new caliper and pop that on when one needs refurbishment, then refurb at your leisure until the one you just put on needs doing and then keep swapping. It's not the cheapest way, but it gets you back up and running quicker and allows you to take your time when working on a caliper.
There are also tools that can help when trying to remove a stuck piston, or indeed just remove a piston when you don't have air: &t=347s You can also pump the pistons out with fluid if you have a pump available, such as when working on a motorbike where you can take the master cylinder onto the bench, or use the vehicle brake system to pump a piston out. Andrew |
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11th May 2023 5:14pm |
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MK Member Since: 28 Aug 2008 Location: Santiago Posts: 2408 |
So do these seals apply to let´s say Puma calipers? Puma 110" SW ............................................................. Earth first. Other planets later |
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6th Oct 2023 11:13am |
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blackwolf Member Since: 03 Nov 2009 Location: South West England Posts: 17320 |
The last pistons I removed I ended up splitting the caliper, then drilling and tapping a hole in the centre of the piston and using a jackscrew to force the piston out. Surprisingly the bores were fine, but not the pistons (even disregarding the large threaded hole in the middle).
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6th Oct 2023 3:32pm |
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