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The mkiv Supra Owners Club

caliper pins:2 John:0


JohnA

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:drown:

I had a couple of hours available today and thought, "wot the feck, let's swap those rear discs that we failed to swap a couple of weeks ago, now that we have the tip about using the two screws in the threaded holes of the old discs."

 

How arrogant was I, miscalculating corrosion :swear:

 

It is next to impossible to get the pins out. :looney:

This time I was better prepared for battle, with small/big/bigger hammers, punches, the lot.

WD40 carefully all over the dodgy bits of the caliper, again and again. It needed serious force punching to even get the pins moving. The problem is that the pins are made of soft metal, so the more you punch, the more they deform at the back and then they won't fit to get out through the hole. :swear:

One pin looked like it would play ball (eventually) but the other one would only move a couple of millimetres and then, badly deformed won't budge any more. Using a punch doesn't help too much because it just draws itself inside the pin :drown:

In the end I had to put everything back together and admit defeat YET again. For one, I need to have a new set of pins available next time, these ones will be kaput.

I am afraid that I'll crack the calipers with the sort of force I have to use (and they still won't budge)

 

Any hints will be greatly appreciated :drown:

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Best to press them out, find somewhere/someone with a small hydraulic press.

Cutting may be an option but Toyota tried this with mine and it made no difference.

Repeated blows with a punch results in them mushrooming out at the ends.

 

Paul

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You could try cutting them in half - that might let you get each bit out easier with some mole grips or whatever?

mole grips have been of no use whatsoever, even with the pin head sticking out a few more millimetres :swear:

 

...Repeated blows with a punch results in them mushrooming out at the ends.

Paul

yeah, tell me about it :swear:

 

To drill them out successfully though they need to be off the car and clamped to a milling machine table... PITA.

 

 

That's what I'm thinking now: get the calipers off and work on them on the bench.

Is it just new washers for the banjo bolts needed, or is it more?

New brake fluid too ---> is it DOT 5.1 that's best for them Chris?

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You don't *NEED* new washers, but it's nice practice to change them, I'd be amazed if they didn't seal when re used though. I use and recommend Motul RB600 fluid, or if the budget is huge, Castrol SRF. I sell these, they are any none silicone based old fluid compatible, and have a much higher boiling point than ordibary fluids, although a branded basic DOT 4 or 5.1 fluid is fine for road usage. I can do a grat price on Motul stuff. http://www.motul.com

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