When it looks like oil, feels like oil on my fingers,
I call it oil, or perhaps an oily fluid.
Anyhow the rear brakes are functioning wonderfully
again. Mostly thanks to Mike Martin, who coached me
along. The issue was that the rear master cylinder
must provide a passage for the OIL to oscillate
between the caliper and the resevoir. So the master
piston should be in its lowest position. So I had to
make an 3 mm. adjustment to make that happen.
But I have been driving with the thing in this
position for ever, never had a problem on this bike, I
did on the Honda. No one ever told me this little
secret, but the combined efforts of Carlos and Mike
illuminated my ignorance. I am like: what s a couple
of mm among friends? But it seems to matter.
The only function of the piston boot is to keep the
piston clean, and I think it will, after my ingenious
repair. Also I sanded the slide pins, and lubricated
them. Now I am a brake specialist, and can answer all
your questions. I know everything about marriage too.
The Aztec Red bikes are way the best, they will go
places where no other color KLR was ever seen. They
just like to act up, and need pampering.
Why call it marriage, just call it a legal contract
between human beings and motorcycles. Or other
persons. Love and commitment. Jacostarica.
aceite
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- Posts: 65
- Joined: Sat Apr 19, 2008 8:43 am
it is oil
Calling it oil is clearly not a good idea when:
-You have to buy a new bottle clearly marked "Brake Fluid" (not "oil")
every time
you use the stuff
-Using actual oil will completely destroy the braking system
-A newbie reading it might conclude that using actual oil is okay
because someone else did it
-Said newbie can have no brakes or a rear wheel lockup due to using
actual oil in the brake system
I doubt that it matters, but I would have replied "Quit using oil" to
every one of your posts about this if I hadn't figured out what you
were talking about.
--Jonathan "smthng" Kalmes
Springfield, VA
2005 Yamaha FJR1300ABS - "Blue Bayou"
2006 Jeep Unlimited Rubicon - "Teflon"
2008 Kawasaki KLR 650 - It's here, but it hasn't earned a name yet.
http://smthng.info
"Look, the truth is, I've been trying to save the world, one person at
a time, but, I'm meant for smthng bigger. Smthng important. I know it
now."

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- Posts: 65
- Joined: Sat Apr 19, 2008 8:43 am
aceite
On Sat, May 24, 2008 at 11:00 AM, Jacobus De Bruyn
wrote:
http://smthng.info
"Look, the truth is, I've been trying to save the world, one person at
a time, but, I'm meant for smthng bigger. Smthng important. I know it
now."
I figured it was a language thing... still, you'd be surprised at what an enthusiastic person who doesn't know any better would do. I've seen bikes ruined because the unknowing owner thought it would be a good idea to use some Slick 50 oil treatment to get rid of a slight knocking. Slick 50 and wet clutches do NOT play well together!> That is because in Spanish, we call it Aceite para > frenos. You have 100.000 diff. kinds of oils, virgin > olive oil, peanut oil, brake oil, snake oil, I don t > think any newbe would get confused, and fill his > braking system with cooking oil.
Slime is kind of like "Fix-A-Flat", but dries more solidly. It's a good last resort, but if you've got a big enough hole or tear in the tube (3/8 inch or so), it'll come out through the valve, the spoke nipple and the bead. Once it dries, it's a nightmare getting the stuff off. Adjusting spokes with the stuff dried in the nipple ain't no fun either. It's good stuff when you need it, though. --Jonathan "smthng" Kalmes Springfield, VA 2005 Yamaha FJR1300ABS - "Blue Bayou" 2006 Jeep Unlimited Rubicon - "Teflon" 2008 Kawasaki KLR 650 - It's here, but it hasn't earned a name yet.> A report on Slime, the tire leak repair goop.

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