97 accord disk brake caliper

Discussion in 'Accord' started by butchb, Jul 5, 2008.

  1. butchb

    butchb Guest

    Somehow the passenger side disk brake pads froze completely wearing
    one pad down to the metal. Had to beat them out of the caliper. Am
    replacing the old pad retainers and shims with new honda parts.

    Discovered the piston boot has a rip in it. There is no fluid leak so
    the piston seal is okay.

    Can I replace the boot without completely removing the piston? What
    lube should I use on the piston, and caliper bolts. Is Syl Glyde ok.

    Thanks

    Been a while since I have seen your posts Teeger - thanks for all the
    support you provide.
     
    butchb, Jul 5, 2008
    #1
  2. butchb

    nick Guest

    If the pads on one side wore quicker than the other, then I would say
    you have a seized piston and that caliper needs to be replaced. Since
    you should do them in pairs I would recommend you do that. The
    remanufactured Cardone costs about $50-60 each.
     
    nick, Jul 6, 2008
    #2
  3. butchb

    ADdiy55 Guest

    Hey Butch,

    I had a similar problem with my 2000 Honda and I subscribed to
    ALLDATAdiy.com and it has been very useful. I am handy and like to do
    things myself and this subscription gives me diagnosis, repair, TBSs,
    recalls and labor times.

    Check it out - I copied the link below for you.

    http://traffic.alldatadiy.com/cgi-bin/redir?pd_link=i1-a44690-o4010-c66365

    Andy Deil
     
    ADdiy55, Jul 7, 2008
    #3
  4. butchb

    motsco_ Guest

    -----------------------

    The piston exerts equal pressure on both sides of the disc but the
    slider pins will prevent the pressure from 'unloading' if they get
    seized up. The whole caliper needs to be unbolted and hung from a hanger
    so you can inspect / repair BOTH the top and bottom slider pins. CR-V
    gets the same problem if not serviced correctly.

    'Curly'
     
    motsco_, Jul 7, 2008
    #4
  5. butchb

    butchb Guest

    When I removed the caliper to get the pads out, the bottom slider pin
    was really hard to get out - had to spray it with WD-40. The grease
    on the bottom slider pin was black and hard. Will replace the slider
    clips, clean the pins and the interior of pin holder, apply Sil Glide
    to the pins and see if the piston is stuck - don't think it is. Will
    also replace the piston boot.

    Oh just as a note in passing - replaced the worn out pads on the
    passenger side only with ceramic pads - all Autozone had in stock -
    the ceramic pads have more stopping power than do standard Honda pads
    - pulls left a bit when I hit the brakes - will replace the Honda pads
    on the drivers side with same ceramic pads - know any hard braking
    would produce a skid - no adventures wanted.

    Thanks
     
    butchb, Jul 7, 2008
    #5
  6. butchb

    nick Guest


    One note on the newer model Accords. My sister has a new 08 EX and
    just hit over 15k miles. I checked the rear pads and the outer pads
    had about 30% left on them while the inner pads are almost completely
    shot. I posted up on driveaccord.net and it seems like the Gen 7 and 8
    have this problem. Looks like Honda needs to go back to the drawing
    board on the rear brake design.
     
    nick, Jul 7, 2008
    #6
  7. butchb

    motsco_ Guest

    -----------------------

    Same thing on brand new CR-V's. Dry slider pins seizing. Honda must be
    forgetting to pump the grease inside the slider pin holes when they
    assemble them. Very bad way to assemble a new vehicle.

    'Curly'
     
    motsco_, Jul 7, 2008
    #7
  8. butchb

    butchb Guest

    Curly:
    My bottom slider pin in the caliper with the inside pad worn out and
    plenty of pad left on the outside, was really hard to get out. Grease
    was baked - took lots of WD-40.

    What grease do you suggest - will Sil Glide a Napa silicone grease be
    best - any other suggestions for high temp grease.

    Thanks
     
    butchb, Jul 8, 2008
    #8
  9. butchb

    motsco_ Guest

    ------------------------

    SilGlide (sp) seems to be the one most mentioned over at
    www.hondasuv.com I use a similar one called Permatex 22063 'ultra disk
    brake caliper lube'

    'Curly'
     
    motsco_, Jul 8, 2008
    #9
  10. butchb

    jim beam Guest

    the official honda solution is something called "m77". it's heavy duty,
    very good, but expensive. contains MoS2 so can handle heavy loads.

    having had some terrible problems with silglide, [turns into a sticky
    glue] i say avoid it. as a minimum, need to be a proper silicone grease
    to preserve the rubbers.
     
    jim beam, Jul 8, 2008
    #10
  11. butchb

    jim beam Guest

    although it's tempting to use, wd40 wrecks brake rubbers. not
    immediately, but if you check back in a couple of weeks, chances are,
    the rubber will be swollen and will tear easily. you need to use
    silicone lubes all the way, unless you're replacing everything of course.

    the best lube to use is "m77". silicone and molybdenum disulfide. it's
    supposed to be used in original assembly, but by the sound of things,
    someone cut corners.

    you can buy it from honda. failing that, only use a silicone lube.
    personally, i think sil-glyde sucks.
    never ever change just one side. ever. totally unbalanced. major
    health risk.
     
    jim beam, Jul 9, 2008
    #11
  12. butchb

    motsco_ Guest

    ----------------------

    Here's a CR-V link that includes Molykote and the explanation of "stuck
    Slider Pins"
    http://www.hondasuv.com/members/showthread.php?t=27940&highlight=molykote

    'Curly'
     
    motsco_, Jul 9, 2008
    #12
  13. butchb

    nick Guest

    Some people on driveaccord.net have been mentioning that it is just
    the design of the caliper being one piston which is causing this to
    occur. I'm not 100% convinced that is the case but on a new car I
    sometimes wonder if it is true.
     
    nick, Jul 9, 2008
    #13
  14. butchb

    jim beam Guest

    that's way too simplistic. not only are single piston calipers are
    highly reliable if manufactured and maintained properly, they offer one
    extremely important design advantage over any other caliper design - the
    ease with which you can accommodate negative scrub radius, and thus make
    the car safer to drive.

    http://www.familycar.com/alignment.htm#Scrub%20Radius

    to achieve negative scrub, the wheel disk needs to be highly dished, and
    the distance between the center line of the bearing and the wheel bolt
    circle minimized. conventional dual piston calipers tend to be much
    thicker and thus make negative scrub harder to achieve. [after-market
    multi-piston calipers use opposing pistons in compact calipers by having
    short travel, shallower pads, and more frequent pad change intervals.]

    there's no more reason a single piston brake will seize on its slider
    than one piston on a multi-piston caliper will seize. and in practice,
    often less so.
     
    jim beam, Jul 10, 2008
    #14
  15. butchb

    butchb Guest

    Got a reman Cardone caliper including the part that it attaches to for
    $40 from Bumper to Bumper. Easy replacement - now am replacing the
    other side. The prices varied for this reman caliper + all the way up
    to $75 - so check several sources before buying. Cardone appears to
    use a white silicone grease on their slider pins.

    Thanks for all the help.
     
    butchb, Jul 10, 2008
    #15
  16. butchb

    motsco_ Guest

    =========================

    The problem is not really the caliper, but the slider pins that seize
    up. Read back a few days and see the MANY explanations of why, on one
    side the pads get worn out and the others are still 'new'.

    'Curly'
     
    motsco_, Jul 10, 2008
    #16

  17. My experience with Cardone in the past has been less than stellar. Be
    sure to keep a close eye on it in the months ahead.

    Just FYI...

    JT
     
    Grumpy AuContraire, Jul 10, 2008
    #17
  18. butchb

    jim beam Guest

    well, white stuff certainly doesn't have black MoS2 in it! i say keep
    an eye on that puppy. better yet, take it back and go for the more
    expensive ones. there is usually a reason for the difference in price.
     
    jim beam, Jul 11, 2008
    #18
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