Ok, thanks! I feel I may have bought the wrong grease then. It is a standard run-of-the-mill from Advanced. Does it have to be the Dow High Vacuum? And perhaps a place I could obtain it or is it a online item only?
I feel it does have to be the one and only for this app. No petroleum based product has the no-creep, no-bleed at any temperature property. If it finds the pads and rotor, there go your brakes!
I bought mine from a local industrial supply business. 10-15 years ago. I saw some posts a while back where it was purchased online and in small quantities.
This caliper design is NOT like the ones found on cars. What is appropriate and acceptable there is NOT appropriate and acceptable for the SOHC4 brakes.
I am going to go through the line whilst they are empty and see if there are any compromises. What in the lines should I look for? Flex? No flex? I mean, I know they pump up and don't leak
Ever open a brand new pack of rubber bands, take one out and stretch them? Notice that the first stretch has more resistance that following stretches?
That's a property of rubber. It loses some resilience and adherence to original shape as it is "worked".
The rubber brake lines are reinforced with embedded woven fibers to keep them from blowing up like a balloon when under pressure. Still the they do flex a bit, and the repeated flexing causes fatigue, whereby they flex even more. It does this at a certain pressure, and as you hand creates more pressure some is diverted to the expanding the lines rather the applying the pressure to the pad/rotor.
Unless you fins cracking in the rubber lines externally, the only way to determine if you rubber lines have reached end of life is an actual pressure/performance test.
The old ones will work, the new ones work better.
I have seen a failure mode where the inside of the rubber line chunked off and became a one way valve. You could apply the brake, but it wouldn't release. I only found this cracking the joint bolts at strategic places to relieve the pressure build up. It was a lower line in this case, and the cure was a new line.
I can recommend SS brake lines. These have a more rigid inner liner that is very resistance to expansion under pressure. This allows all of the pressure built up by hand to be directed to the pad rotor. The lever is harder, and the hand pressure modulation during braking has a much more precise feel.
Cheers,