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WD 40 on calipers Williams





I used to have a grinding noise on hard left hand cornering. It was a sticking caliper grinding the disc apparently. A local garage added WD40 and it was fine. 4 Weeks later and its back. Can i add WD 40? If so what do i do? If i have to get some new calipers i will, but i need a temporary measure so i dont wear away my new discs and pads.
 


leave the wd40 alone as u dont know where u need to spray it

your calipers (probably the carrier with the 2 pins in, has 2 little black rubber protective boots) needs to be stripped, cleaned and reassembled

they seem to need a lot of care and attention, ive had to do mine several times, it has a MASSIVE effect on performance, i cant begin to explain.

I had to do mine again last weekend, the initial bite now is amazing! if your calipers are sticking, it will lead to poor performance and premature failure of the discs, by means of warping
 


Well im sure i could do anything, its just a case of someone describing it well enough. I deal with some pretty complex machines at work, but then ive been properly trained on them.
 


ok fair enough

http://www.btinternet.com/~weightspalace/caliper.jpg

the bottom red circle is the lower carrier pin, as i said theres 2 another at the top

the caliper bolts to these pins with 2 x 13mm bolts (one on either pin) that u cant see on this pic (as there on the back of the caliper)

unbolt the caliper from the carrier

And where the caliper bolted into the carrier (those 2 sliding pins with black rubber boots on) need to be pulled out, if there stuck fast then this further proves there seized as the should slide in and out easily, they need to be extracted completley (give them an almighty tug) when ther out they need to be cleaned of any rust, dried out copper grease etc and re greased and reassembled

goes without saying but.........dont get any grease on discs, as this will contaminate ur pads and they will never work again
 


was wd40 used in the original development and oiling of the williams caliper in the first place though??? dont want to ruin the brakes they spent all that time developing!
 


It is a piss easy job consisting of 2 bolts, its not a complex machine so if you can handle them you should be able to rebuild the simple slides.

As weight says they corrode, mainly the front one and sticks in its bore.

Copper grease makes rubber components hard and brittle and specialst rubber grease for brakes should be used.

WD40 is a water dispersant, not a lubricant and should not be used on braking components.
 


WD40 is actually a degreaser - so will over time remove grease and cause more problems. Better off doing it properly - unless you want to have to strip them every couple of months!!
 
  Clio 190bhp Hybrid


EBC now do refurbed units on exchange and so do GSF and Andyspares. Thinking of Tarox calipers though if they do them to fit standard sized disks.
 


Caliper looks the same as mine, the haynes manual says you have to replace the guide pin bolts(carrier pins), each time you dismantle them, strange seing as you only have to do em up to 35Nm
 


wd 40 is a water dispersant, great for cleaning stuff but it thins out the grease you want to keep there. copper grease is best on brakes as it has high temp resistance, and so will not burn/dry away as quick. best to take them apart and rebuild.
 


Rob - remember that I had sticking calipers at the rear when we met last week? You recommended the WD-40 thing to me, but I just let my garage use their own rememdy, which is basically as people have described here. It worked very well and saved me the price of new rear calipers.

Im very sceptical about applying WD-40 to anywhere near the brakes. On mountain bike disc brakes, any WD-40 or similar penetrative lubricant will contaminate the braking surface and the pads. This really buggers up the braking performance. As you can imagine, this is common as people often spray a lubricant onto the chainweel, which just is on the other side of a relatively thin hub from the disc and caliper - and they get all the overspray. Like Maff says, WD-40 also thins the grease.

OK, so you can take the pads out, but removing the disc is a lot of effort and I can see the WD-40 contaminating it. So even if it does cure the problem, itll create another problem! Apply with care!
 
  172 cup,s2 rs turbo


the rubber seals and the slides are avaliable in a kit if the slides are heavily corroded and wont clean up.the slide rubbers are also avaliable separatly as well if thats all you need.normally the rubbers perish and lets water in.the water creates corrosion and the slides seize.
 
  172 cup,s2 rs turbo


sure can.if i dont get back to you within a couple of days then pm me to remind me.my memorys terrible.
 
  Clio 190bhp Hybrid


Whats the cure for the rears sticking. Mine always lock on (handbrake) when its been raining or left in cold for a few days.
 


Quote: Originally posted by weight on 19 February 2004


made by nasa to remove water from jet engines

WD40 = water dispersant (dont know what the 40 bit is lol)
40 because it took them 40 attempts to get it right.
 


Quote: Originally posted by Matty on 19 February 2004

Whats the cure for the rears sticking. Mine always lock on (handbrake) when its been raining or left in cold for a few days.
thats sticking pads not calipers, i think

its fine, well mine does it lol
 
  172 cup,s2 rs turbo


40 because thats how many tins you need on one jet engine before you decide its crap and give up.
 


Quote: Originally posted by maff on 19 February 2004

wd 40 is a water dispersant, great for cleaning stuff but it thins out the grease you want to keep there. copper grease is best on brakes as it has high temp resistance, and so will not burn/dry away as quick. best to take them apart and rebuild.
like i said, copper grease will destroy rubber seals.
 


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