One of the pistons in my rear XT disc brake keeps sticking, in that one of the pistons comes way out and the other hardly at ... 
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Xt Brake Caliper Question


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ThingOne
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PostPosted: Sun 6th Jul 4:51pm    Post subject: Xt Brake Caliper Question Reply with quote Report Abuse

One of the pistons in my rear XT disc brake keeps sticking, in that one of the pistons comes way out and the other hardly at all.
The short term solution is to hold back the one coming out all the way with a screwdriver and pump the brakes which forces out the other piston, but this solution is only temporary.

How do you free up a sticky piston?.. is it ok to remove the pads and drench in CRC ?.. or is there a recommended method.
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musket
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PostPosted: Sun 6th Jul 4:53pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Report Abuse

CRC has no place near bikes.

I've seen mineral fluid used to lubricate XT pistons, but you really need to clear out whatever is causing the friction.
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Wobbler
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PostPosted: Sun 6th Jul 4:53pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Report Abuse

Remove the pads, clean everything up with a cotton bud and slap some mineral oil on them, pump them in and out a few times slapping some more oil on them.
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Mr_Bob
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PostPosted: Sun 6th Jul 4:57pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Report Abuse

Dis assemble brake caliper, pop the pistons out, re-grease seals on the pistons with rubber grease, rebuild, bleed the brake, and it will sort it.
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ThingOne
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PostPosted: Sun 6th Jul 5:00pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Report Abuse

Mr_Bob wrote:
Dis assemble brake caliper, pop the pistons out, re-grease seals on the pistons with rubber grease, rebuild, bleed the brake, and it will sort it.
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OK, hopefully not too tricky.. What is rubber grease, is regular grease no good?.

Might try the mineral oil trick first, I assume by mineral oil people mean the same stuff used as brake fliuid, You only seem to be able to buy about a litre of that at a time!
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Wobbler
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PostPosted: Sun 6th Jul 5:03pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Report Abuse

Yeah the brake fluidy stuff, if stuff is coming out as you pump the pistons in and out wipe the parc off and repeat, keep doing it till there is no more tihse coming out, I wouldn't got dissembling xts if you can avoid it due to the mono block carry on.
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Mr_Bob
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PostPosted: Sun 6th Jul 5:07pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Report Abuse

rubber grease = sometimes called O-ring grease
it's red and keeps the seals working a lot smoother.
try taking the brake pads out, and try to free up the sticky piston by stopping the one that moves more freely, and squeezing the lever.
then try spraying silicone spray onto the piston, once it's free and moving, then clean the caliper before putting the pads back in, and give it a try.
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Nick_K
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PostPosted: Sun 6th Jul 5:18pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Report Abuse

I've also had good luck doing a simple clean and lube.

Remove pads
Pump pistong so they are nearly all the way out
Good clean with hot soapy water toothbrush an earbuds
Lube pistons with the mineral oil you use in the brakes.
Push pistons all the way in and leave them like this overnight.

Problem sorted.


Last edited by Nick_K on Sun 6th Jul 5:51pm; edited 1 time in total
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ThingOne
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PostPosted: Sun 6th Jul 5:49pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Report Abuse

Nick_K wrote:
I've also had good luck doing a simple clean and lube.

Remove pads
Pump pistong so they are nearly all the way out
Good clean with hot soapy water toothbrush an earbuds
Lube pistons with the mineral oil you use in the brakes.
Push pads all the way in and leave them like this overnight.

Problem sorted.


Ta, sounds like a job for next weekend.. im knackered, I think riding around with my brake half on didnt help today. Blush
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Oli
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PostPosted: Sun 6th Jul 6:14pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Report Abuse

Nick_K wrote:
I've also had good luck doing a simple clean and lube.

Remove pads
Pump pistons so they are nearly all the way out
Good clean with hot soapy water, toothbrush and/or earbuds
Lube pistons with the mineral oil you use in the brakes.
Push pistons all the way in and leave them like this overnight.
Clean excess oil off.

Problem sorted.


This works 9 times out of 10. Double Thumbs Up
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konaking
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PostPosted: Sun 6th Jul 6:16pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Report Abuse

take pads and pistons out try brake clean
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danose
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PostPosted: Sun 6th Jul 6:22pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Report Abuse

Oli wrote:
Nick_K wrote:
I've also had good luck doing a simple clean and lube.

Remove pads
Pump pistons so they are nearly all the way out
Good clean with hot soapy water, toothbrush and/or earbuds
Lube pistons with the mineral oil you use in the brakes.
Push pistons all the way in and leave them like this overnight.
Clean excess oil off.

Problem sorted.


This works 9 times out of 10. Double Thumbs Up




yep - generally it's just trapped crud in the gap between piston and cliper - even quicker solution is pads out, syringe full of ipa into piston gap, cycle piston and watch black crud pour out - repeat a couple of times and all fixed

really common prob down here mid-summer - ultra fine clay dust gums up things beautifully
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Colin
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PostPosted: Sun 6th Jul 6:31pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Report Abuse

konaking wrote:
take pads and pistons out try brake clean


mean words no could of use punctation anything and random
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jamieinauckland
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PostPosted: Sun 6th Jul 7:04pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Report Abuse

mineral oils is not brake fluid. Don't put any kind of brake fluid near your brakes. It will rot your seals.
The mineral oil people are on about is just a light form of normal oil. You can buy it from anywhere that sells shimano or Magura stuff.

To lube them, take the wheel off and remove the pads. Slowly pump the lever so about 4mm of piston is showing. Careful that the pistons don't pop out. clean in there with a cotton bud then lube the pistons with some oil. Repeat a few times and they should be sweet. If not they'll need to be stripped and rebuilt.
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Stun




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PostPosted: Sun 6th Jul 7:23pm    Post subject: Reply with quote Report Abuse

Mr_Bob wrote:
Dis assemble brake caliper, pop the pistons out, re-grease seals on the pistons with rubber grease, rebuild, bleed the brake, and it will sort it.
Double Thumbs Up



This is the last option to go down in my opinion - especially if it's the twin piston XT, vs the old 4 piston jobbie.
First up, try bleeding the brake. The piston may not be retracting properly due to air being trapped in the caliper.
If that doesn't work, try the piston cleaning trick as other have suggested.
The twin piston XTR's have had a few issues with sticky pistons, most of which can be fixed with a VERY thorough bleed.

I've pulled apart a lot of 4 pot XT / Grimeca / XSIV calipers back in the day, and really, it doesn't need to be done until it's completely knackered. Most often, when the pistons are leaking... Eh?
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