New pads rubbing - what gives?

Alpman

New Member
Oct 21, 2019
63
51
Annecy France
Hi all. After my debacle with the wrong brake pad I bought a set of the right ones and installed same yesterday expecting the best. All went well until I spun the front wheel.The pads are impinging on the rotor, stopping the wheel after a couple rotations. Will this excess brake pad material wear off after a short while or do I need to bleed off some fluid? Is this normal with SRAM Code RSC’s? BTW the rotor is true and the calipers perfectly aligned so we don’t need to worry about that. I depressed the pistons as far as possible before installing the pads but they wouldn’t retract much which leads me to think I need to bleed some fluid...
 

Alpman

New Member
Oct 21, 2019
63
51
Annecy France
I'd be inclined to remove the pads, remove the bleed screw on the lever, once the screw is at it's highest point on your bars, push the pistons back, retighten the screws, reset your levers, reinsert the pads..(y)
I’m going to have another go at resetting the pistons and if that fails will bleed some fluid.
 

Squatch

Member
Feb 20, 2020
26
28
Washington State
I also agree with Member 118 aboves comment.

Sometimes sram can be a pain.... I do bed the brakes after a new set is installed. This gives a good even grab but it can also take off the rough nicks etc. from install, and from being dinged up from shipping and handling.

I now use the the little install spacers now. They don't hurt anything by using these, and they are cheap! In addition..... I hold a white piece of paper on the other side while looking at the gap, this gives me a good contrast.

Another good video from Clint Gibbs below.

 
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salko

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Aug 29, 2019
1,275
867
SLO
Well my experience with this brake caliper adjustment spacers is they work fine as long as you have smaller rotors, but if you have larger rotors (200-220mm) which tends to side-flex a bit more, then this spacers usually will not help you as you wish, because when you are tightening the caliper with brake lever squeezed, the force of bolts and your allen key tends to push the caliper+rotor sideways for a bit (AFAIK only Dominion A4 brake calipers have small side bolts in mounting eylets, which eliminates this problem). And when you're done tightening and you release the lever, the caliper will stay still, but the rotor will return to its normal position and will most likely rub aganst one of the braking pads, or at least not be perfectly centered between pads ... And if you have slightly untrue rotor, the problem is even bigger. So with large rotors I tend to center the caliper only by eye of sight.
 
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salko

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Aug 29, 2019
1,275
867
SLO
RSC levers have a bite point adjustment dial, which will change bite point at lever end, it will NOT change brake pad clearance against rotor.
 

Alpman

New Member
Oct 21, 2019
63
51
Annecy France
Easter morning sitrep. Somewhere in occupied France. Thanks for the help guys. Woke early and attacked my brake problem. Removed the bleed valve on the brake lever and introduced a SRAM brake block (red). This displaced a fair amount of fluid enabling me to push the pistons home. I wet some string with DOT fluid and flossed the pistons until they were clean and pulsing evenly. Reinstalled the wheel and put in my new pads. After truing the caliper I bedded in the new brakes (SRAM organics). Happy to report that the braking action is now eye watering. Lesson learned is that if the brake bleed is performed on worn pads you will need to bleed some fluid when you put in new ones. Job done. Thanks again.
 

Funkeydunk

Well-known member
Subscriber
May 28, 2019
389
297
Uk
Take of, nuke the site from orbit, it’s the only way to be sure. Then buy some maguras ...booom:alien:
 

salko

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Aug 29, 2019
1,275
867
SLO
Lesson learned is that if the brake bleed is performed on worn pads you will need to bleed some fluid when you put in new ones. Job done. Thanks again.
You should always remove brake pads and install bleed block before bleeding, so condition of the pads does not affect bleeding itself...
 

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