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What alternate brake master cylinder will work?
- taylee
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Or...what the piston and size of the oem one is?
1985 GPZ750 (non-turbo)
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- pete greek1
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Pete
1980 LTD 1000..,1976 LTD 900, have the 1000&900 now. the rest are previous= 1978 KZ 650 B.., 1980 Yamaha XT 500..,1978 Yamaha DT 400.., 1977 Yamaha yz 80..,Honda trail ct 70.., Honda QA 50...5-1/2 hp brigs & straton CAT chopper mini bike...3-1/2 hp mini bike (WHEN GAS WAS ABOUT 45 CENTS A GALLON)!!!!
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- floivanus
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Any 5/8" bore bar mount (7/8" bars) will work
my bikes; 80kz1000(project), 77 gl1000, 74 h2 (project)
Past; 78 kz1000, 83 kz550
Andrew
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- taylee
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What do more modern dual disc brakes on USD forks use? Let's say I go to a GSXR USD front end. Do they still use the 5/8"?
Or
What is the effect of using a 14 or 13 mm bore master cylinder with the stock GPZ brake system?
1985 GPZ750 (non-turbo)
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- 650ed
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taylee wrote: What is the effect of using a 14 or 13 mm bore master cylinder with the stock GPZ brake system?
Touchy brakes that require a long pull on the lever. Two calipers require twice the amount of brake fluid movement compared to a single caliper. So the piston in a small bore must move further than one in a large bore to push the brake pads the same distance. Ed
1977 KZ650-C1 Original Owner - Stock (with additional invisible FIAMM horn)
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- taylee
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Any idea what the modern dual disc bikes use?
1985 GPZ750 (non-turbo)
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- bluezbike
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Hth
79 KZ 1000 LTD
77 KZ 1000 B1 LTD (awaiting electrical resurrection)
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- 650ed
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taylee wrote: Pretty good explanation. So, I'm thinking going to a 14mm from a 16mm wouldn't be too bad. Meaning, the lever likely wouldn't go all the way to the bar.
Any idea what the modern dual disc bikes use?
I wouldn't bet on it. Dual disks use a 5/8" bore MC. 5/8" = about 16mm. Single disk brakes use 14mm. I don't understand why anyone would want to use the wrong size MC when trying to upgrade their brakes. It appears that you didn't get the answer you wanted, so you chose to ignore it.
The different bore sizes in the brake systems used by Kawasaki and other bike manufacturers were engineered for performance - not looks or cost savings, so there really was a reason for the different bore sizes. Assuming you are upgrading your brakes to a dual disk setup it makes sense to me to employ the same master cylinder size specified by the engineers.
Here's a cut & paste from another site you may find interesting. This KZ650 owner tried a 14mm master cylinder with dual disks and came up with what I consider to be a rather conclusive test.
"I thought I was going crazy not being able to get a decent lever feel no matter how I bled the brakes. Done the reverse bleed and absolutely no air bubbles coming up to the master. I then started to wonder if it really could be the dreaded 14mm vs 5/8" issue so started clamping down hoses to see if reducing the volume allows the master to operate at its sweet spot. Before starting the lever could easily pull all the way to the bars. Clamped the single line from master to splitter and the lever was rock solid. Moved only about 15 mm from the resting point. Released it and back to the full travel with mushy feel. Then clamped the left caliper hose and this time the lever comes in about 25 mm and is pretty firm. At that point I thought I may have air in that caliper but swapping the clamp to the right side hose has the same effect, a near perfect feel with 25mm of travel before brake is fully on.
This leads me to believe that the m/c simply cannot move enough fluid to operate the brakes through these hoses, splitter and dual calipers."
1977 KZ650-C1 Original Owner - Stock (with additional invisible FIAMM horn)
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- 80B4
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taylee wrote: Pretty good explanation. So, I'm thinking going to a 14mm from a 16mm wouldn't be too bad. Meaning, the lever likely wouldn't go all the way to the bar.
Any idea what the modern dual disc bikes use?
1980B4 1000
1978 Z1R
1978 B3 750
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- 650ed
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1977 KZ650-C1 Original Owner - Stock (with additional invisible FIAMM horn)
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- Nessism
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Using a 14mm (or 1/2") master on a dual disc KZ will result in a spongy feel at the lever. For any given level of hand pressure though there will be more braking force. That's the tradeoff.
Some modern bikes with dual disc setups have masters that are smaller than the 5/8" that came on our bikes, but those bikes have ultra rigid brake systems so the lever feel is firm despite the small piston size.
On my KZ750E I used an EX650 master (5/8" bore). You can find these masters dirt cheap on ebay, and since they are late model, you don't have to worry about internal corrosion. Only downside is the reservoir angles down a little more than ideal (in my opinion) for use with the common superbike end handlebars.
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- DoctoRot
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- Oh, the usual... I bowl, I drive around...
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