Ok, I admit: I'm useless when it comes to anything electric, electronic or hydraulic (the complete list looks like the phone book of Tokyo, but you get the point). So I need help.
My front brakes have been acting up lately. When I pull the lever, it has way too much dead stroke until some braking starts happening. Bike brakes great and the lever effort has not increased, just the stroke. If I pull the lever, let it go and pull again, all within 1-2 seconds, then the second time I pull it it behaves what I would call correctly: almost no dead stroke and immediate response of the brakes. If I wait more than, say, 5 seconds between the first and second actuation of the lever, it gets spongy again.
So I got the thing bled by my dealer (they are very competent and I trust them, only good experiences with them; he really looks after me as a customer) last Thursday during a rear tire change, and on the way home they sure felt different. Not necessarily better, though.
On Friday morning they were just as before. It's bugging me. I'm planning to spend some long time (several weeks) in ungodly lands and I want the bike to be in as good a condition as possible. Brakes have a tendency to influence very much the chances of getting home or not.
So please tell me what can I look for. A friend explained that there could be a too thin brake disk or pads, but I thought the system would compensate for that, at least to a certain degree. Maybe I exceeded that degree? Disks have 32 000 miles of slightly heavy use, with a few tours to the Alps in all-out banzai mode. Pads have less than 6000 miles, but this is the first non-Kawasaki set of pads (EBC) I use.
Ideas?