Kawasaki Concours Forum
The C10, aka Kawasaki Concours - The Original => The Bike - C10 => Topic started by: sroby on August 14, 2011, 04:53:54 PM
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In preperation for my tokiko 4 pot upgrade I snagged a nice set off of ebay. They appear to be in clean good shape, they are off of an 03 gsxr 750 I dont know how long they have been sitting. My question to the experts out there is do I need to split them and replace the seals or just what should be done in preperation while waiting for the new adaptors to be finished by Jim Snyder and co. or make my own now that I have the calipers? Also what is going to be a good pad to install. thx Steve
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I think I'd just clean them up with some brakeclean, and run some hh pads. It worked fine for me! Steve
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I think you should be OK with just cleaning them up if they look to be in good shape. That's all I did with mine and I ended up with about the same year/model calipers you have. The EBC equivalent pad number should be FA158. As Steve said, a set of HH will be good or even a set of kevlar/organic pads will be OK. I'm running a set of organic pads and they seem to work fine for me.
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I run that same caliper on my sv 650 with some similar adapters. May calipers came with ebc pads and they do work well-enoughl. But if you want to try something in the amazing category, look for Vesrah RJL compound.
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They are probably OK if they look clean with no signs of leaking seals but you won't know for sure until they are under pressure. If this bike is going to be long term for you then dimantling, inspection, and fitting new seals is peace of mind.
Regards, Russell
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Great advice from all I really appreciate it. Regards steve
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I must have more info on this upgrade! Who is making the adapters? I am dying for some better brakes on this bike.
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I'd ordered the seal kits while waiting for delivery of the calipers, I knew I was doing brakes for the long-haul and wanted the peace of mind that you only get if you do the full rebuild.
Externally mine cleaned-up pretty good.
When I broke 'em apart to install the seal kit I found a 1/2 teaspoon of something that looked like a big lunger in the lowest back cylinder of one caliper. Must've been some kind of emulsion of fluid and water, was very thick and nasty; there's no way that would ever flush from that location - that cylinder is a 'dead-end' in the brake system.