Took a while to for my grease gun to ship but for $6 I can't really complain and it got the brake pistons out.
Looks like a crime scene. Yummy
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Couldn't get any grease through the bleeder valves even after cracking them open a little so I screwed the nozzle into the oil line like others have done, just applying teflon tape to make up for not screwing in the nozzle completely. The rear caliper was a PITA cause only one piston was really stuck so the other came out from the grease real easy but then the grease couldn't build pressure anymore. I tried putting some wood in between the pistons but that didn't work (I used plywood, it crushed it), so I just split the caliper. To build the pressure I needed to seal the brake fluid passage that travels between the halves of the caliper, and holding your finger over it isn't enough (who woulda thought). Instead I threw a wad of teflon tape over the passage and clamped down on it with vise grips effectively sealing the caliper half and allowing the pressure to build behind the piston. I'd think the same would work on the other side of the caliper except you'd need the grease to go through the bleeder valve.
Now I gotta clean these up. What are some methods to clean the calipers up especially the insides where's the seals and piston go? Carpy sells a refurbishing kit (
https://carpyscaferacers.com/shop/shop-our-store/motorcycle-parts-accessories/honda-cb500-cb550-cb750-parts-upgrades/brake-caliper-refurbishing-kit/) but that's $22 + shipping for some rubber Dremel wheels. There are other rubber wheels for cheaper that are impregnated with emery that sound good. Also thinking Barkeeper's friend and a cloth wheel on my Dremel (which I already have), Scotchbrite pads, or wire wheel it. Just worried about scratching up the insides too bad.