fossyant
Ride It Like You Stole It!
- Location
- South Manchester
As recommended above, Epic kits are great, and come with good instructions.
Not really as bolt can still seize. Not chance of seizing with split pin.
You're probably right, but sod's law and all that..In reality you probably won't need them for a long time, unless something goes seriously wrong. I've had a hydraulic brakes on one bike which I bought secondhand which was about three years old when I got it and I've had it for another three and haven't had to touch them for pads or hydraulic problems.
Rather than starting another thread on the subject...
I am about to bleed the rear brake on my MTB. I bought a cheap kit which looks like it will do the job. I have also watched a few videos demonstrating the technique, so I think that I should be okay.
Just one question... The instructions with the kit suggest draining all the old oil and refilling with new. Is that really necessary? I will watch the videos again, but I think that they just got the air out of the system by topping up with new fluid until the bubbles stopped coming through. (It's mineral oil. Don't know if that makes any difference to the replace vs top-up question...?)
Good thinking - that makes sense!Force some new fluid in and see what colour comes out. If the fluid is very old it could be black. Keep going with new fluid until the stuff coming out looks like what is going in
In reality you probably won't need them for a long time, unless something goes seriously wrong. I've had a hydraulic brakes on one bike which I bought secondhand which was about three years old when I got it and I've had it for another three and haven't had to touch them for pads or hydraulic problems.