they would be m10 x 1.25 or 1.00 but i couldnt say which without checking, not easy to buy except from specialist bolt suppliers like bapp
 
Managed to get some - Sheffield Nut and Bolt company, really helpful guys.

Anyway, got everything back together, but still pretty poor breaking performance, but I think this may be the servo, doing some research, it looks like they can crack around the bolt holes, which it looks like mine has, there seems to also be a loss of pressure from the joints where the two halves are joined together. New servo ordered, so we will see.
 
if i can get the pistons out of them.

Air line usually works for me - at least enough to get hold of them with a vice or mole grips.... presume you are fitting stainless ones ? ...

IME, the genuine seal kits are worth the extra moolah...
 
Air line usually works for me - at least enough to get hold of them with a vice or mole grips.... presume you are fitting stainless ones ? ...

IME, the genuine seal kits are worth the extra moolah...
Air line works for me anorl. It pushes the easiest one out first, so you have to slide that one back in and then hold it in with something so the air pushes on the other piston.
+1 on the genuine seals and SS pistons and you want that nice red brake grease to put on the new components when you slide them together.
 
Air line usually works for me - at least enough to get hold of them with a vice or mole grips.... presume you are fitting stainless ones ? ...

IME, the genuine seal kits are worth the extra moolah...

Struggled with an airline. They are soaking in paraffin in my wash tank, see if that helps.
 
Struggled with an airline. They are soaking in paraffin in my wash tank, see if that helps.

Typical eh?:rolleyes: try two bits of bar inside the pistons in this sort of shape \/- push the two bits apart to lock inside the piston, ... and rotate the piston - should come out enough to get hold of with mole grips .... maybe :)
 
It's easier to split the calipers to remove stuck pistons, I never bother doing them complete anymore.
However....a couple of tips to try if you don't want to split them.
1- try pushing the piston back in then reapply the air, piston back in, reapply the air and repeat, this usually works.
2- try and rotate the piston too whilst doing the above.
3- it is possible to weld a piece of bar to the top of the piston, avoid too much heat, just a tack with a MIG, this will give you a handle to wiggle/rotate the piston.
I've had a piston that took all the above including gripping the piston in a vice and pressing the (split) caliper body off.
I've always found the bores to be fine even on the really stuck one, use cotton bud things to clean the bore seal groove, there is loads of dirt in there usually. Spend time to clean/derust the Recess that the wiper seal sits in , the new steel ring/seal will tap home nicely then. I used a flat blade screw driver and a Stanley blade to get back to shiney metal.
 
Given up for the day - started raining. However here are the symptoms:

Bleed the system, so there is no air coming out of the calipers, with the pedal pushed to the floor.
Pedal is soft and goes to the floor, pump a couple of times, and pedal goes hard, give it a few seconds and pedal goes to the floor again
If i crack off the bleed nipple on the front calipers, I get small air bubbles coming out - they look to me as if air is being drawn in, rears are fine, no air bubbles at all

I've checked all unions - cleaned off with break cleaner and checked for weeping, all seem good. I'e ordered some new flexi's, but i don't think its that. The calipers are brand new (allmakes) as well as disks and pads.

Stuck on finding either a leak or what I'm missing.
if youve fitted new calipers , the pistons will retract after pressing pedal due to the seal ,until theyve done a few hundred or more miles, you can improve it by pulling one pad out pressing pedal so as the piston/pistons move out 10mm or so then prise pistons back till you can just refit the pad repeat on other pads
 
Britpart, allmales ,Bearmach calipers? To be fair mate going cheap on brakes is never a good idea.
id rather have pairs of new calipers and the cheap ones have been more than ok, they wont last as long but then you could fit stainless pistons to those , i used to rebuild hundreds of calipers but why bother if you can buy new
 
I had mine hot zinc sprayed during the rebuild 16 yrs ago so they never go rusty:)
Stainless steel pistons and I'm on happy Street for a good few years now.
 
Ok, so I'm almost at a loss as to whats going on.

So far:
  1. Replaced
    1. Calipers (Allmakes pattern part)
    2. Master Cylinder (OEM)
    3. Brake Servo (OEM)
    4. Front Brake lines and flexi's
  2. Bled the system multiple times - cannot see any more air coming out of the system
  3. Vacuum is good - enough to hold the pipe on the end of my finger.
The pedal travels about two inches before i get any brake bite, feels spongy even then. If i pump the pedal, it firms up, but keeping pressure on the pedal slowly moves the pedal downwards

If i clamp off the brake flexi's one at a time, there is no change, there is no weeping from any of the joints as far as I can tell.

Only other thing I am going to try is to reverse bleeding the calipers to see if that helps.

Anyone else have any suggestions?
 
Hmm, this being the third master cylinder - the original one, then a bearmach one, and then an OEM one - they can't all be duff surely?
 

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