steve_sordy
Wedding Crasher
My grandson was complaining about his squeaky rear brake. His pads were like this:
They were oil soaked.
I had previously checked that his brake calliper was not leaking, so I'm fairly sure that it was contamination. I have repeatedly told him not to put so much oil on his chain! Anyway, I ordered some more pads, but in the meantime I thought I'd have a go at cleaning them.
I used the "Disco Inferno" to get this result:
He will need to bed them in again, but I reckon he should use these before the new pads, just in case I was wrong about the callipers.
I know that pads can be cheap, but sometimes you just don't have any, or not quickly enough! Hence the Disco Inferno!
Disco Inferno
Place the pads, brake surface upwards) onto a concrete surface or anything else that will not burn or melt. Pour some iso-propyl alcohol onto the pads (it's the major component of brake cleaner, but I've never tried brake cleaner) then get your gas blow lamp out and set it on maximum onto the pads. My flame size is small so I find it better to heat each pad separately. Keep the heat on until the edges of the pads glow red. Initially all the oil will burn off as black smoke and when you remove the flame the pads will continue to burn with a yellow flame. Once the edges of the pads have glowed red and they no longer continue to burn when you remove the torch, they are done.
When the pads are cool, place some abrasive paper on a smooth flat surface and rub the pad surface over it in a circular fashion. Blow the dust off frequently. Keep going until you are happy that the pads are looking good.
Bed the pads in as normal and away you go!
They were oil soaked.
I had previously checked that his brake calliper was not leaking, so I'm fairly sure that it was contamination. I have repeatedly told him not to put so much oil on his chain! Anyway, I ordered some more pads, but in the meantime I thought I'd have a go at cleaning them.
I used the "Disco Inferno" to get this result:
He will need to bed them in again, but I reckon he should use these before the new pads, just in case I was wrong about the callipers.
I know that pads can be cheap, but sometimes you just don't have any, or not quickly enough! Hence the Disco Inferno!
Disco Inferno
Place the pads, brake surface upwards) onto a concrete surface or anything else that will not burn or melt. Pour some iso-propyl alcohol onto the pads (it's the major component of brake cleaner, but I've never tried brake cleaner) then get your gas blow lamp out and set it on maximum onto the pads. My flame size is small so I find it better to heat each pad separately. Keep the heat on until the edges of the pads glow red. Initially all the oil will burn off as black smoke and when you remove the flame the pads will continue to burn with a yellow flame. Once the edges of the pads have glowed red and they no longer continue to burn when you remove the torch, they are done.
When the pads are cool, place some abrasive paper on a smooth flat surface and rub the pad surface over it in a circular fashion. Blow the dust off frequently. Keep going until you are happy that the pads are looking good.
Bed the pads in as normal and away you go!