Yeah I had to do this in the end. Fit new pads, advance the pistons a bit and it felt much better. Seems like I can only get around 60% pad wear though and they feel shite again and end up fitting new pads to get it to feel good again.I find on SRAM brakes I have to advance the pistons quite a bit (wheel out) to get them feeling firm enough. Don't have to do this on my Shimanos.
If it's not clicking, then I suspect it's not connecting properly, so you could be sucking air in. Is it the SRAM kit? I had a cheap one that didn't work too well. The seal on the connector can get damaged too.
I prefer the older design on my REs TBH. Simpler.
its a scratch.......... caused by a stone by the look of it.View attachment 73938
Also, trying to figure out if this is a scratch or the makings of a crack in the rear rim.
the pistons will adjust to the worn pads if you reset them. Push all pistons fully back after cleaning and lubing them. Caliper clearance to rotor is only c 2mm on all brakes on my bikes.Well the bike is back from the workshop and brakes feel good for now. Mechanic said it must be my bleeding edge adaptor as he had no problems bleeding it.
On to next issue.
Ride at risca today, and started to get a dodgy noise from rear wheel. On inspection it seems the rear brake caliper was ever so slightly fouling the rotor. I can't quite believe that this can happen to be honest. It is crazy close to the rotor. The rotor now has marks on it from where it is wearing and I'm left wondering how I can stop this. I've tried to realign the caliper and due to the pads having worn more on one side the brake now pulls the rotor towards the caliper. I might swap out the pads for fresh ones and rest the pistons.
the pistons will adjust to the worn pads if you reset them. Push all pistons fully back after cleaning and lubing them. Caliper clearance to rotor is only c 2mm on all brakes on my bikes.
Looks a bout the same as mine.I'd say it's < 2mm on mine, nearer 1mm. You mean the gap between the adapter and the rotor? I run my pads as close as poss so much closer than the gap to the adapter.
Is it rubbing all the way round the rotor or just one point?
View attachment 73981
As I mentioned before you need to clean and lube the pistons and set them fully home into the calliper. All hydraulic brakes are self adjusting to compensate for pad wear. Use the block in the post above or improvise to get each piston extended in turn. Use IPA on an ear bud to clean the piston then dot fluid to lubricate it....repeat until it returns fully into the calliper easily. Repeat the process for each piston in turn. Clean everything with IPA before refitting the pads.You may also have a loose rear hub....the lever thru axle does not look properly closed and is also very vulnerable to being grabbed on the trail.
I’m swapping mine for Magura mt5 with hope rotors soon. Ask your local bike shop who you use to advise you. Hi use ace in Monmouth who supplied the bike, they are great
the main difference in quality between bleed sets are the syringes rather than the fittings. Dot is pretty corrosive and on the less expensive bleed kits the seals on the syringes are more likely to deteriorate over time.Got a quote of 45 quid for fitting and extra 50 if motor needs dropping so basically 100 quid as motor will need dropping due to hose routed through.
Looks like I'll be doing it myself for that sort of money
Also, just spent around 2 hours bleeding my brakes using the neighbour's SRAM pro bleed kit as opposed to my epic bleed kit and brakes actually feel pretty decent now. Perhaps it was the shitty epic bleed kit that was the problem? (And also my shitty mechanical skills )
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