I bought and installed a used-but-working rear master cylinder onto my 1980 Honda cb900c.
I bled the brake and the brake pedal tightened up and air bubbles coming out of the bleed nipple were reduced to no bubbles.
I then got ready to take her out for a spin. While I pushed the bike out into the driveway to have enough room to climb aboard and start her, I noticed a bit more drag on the bike than I had felt when pushing the bike around in the days before I fixed and bled the back brake.
However, I said to myself "well, I have been pushing the bike around these past few days and the rear caliper has been completely removed during that time, so today after re-installing the caliper, of COURSE it's going to feel like there's a bit more drag. Plus I just bled the back brake. I'm 100% convinced that's all I'm feeling here."
The amount of drag while I pushed the bike on the driveway was *minimal* -- not enough to impede me from moving this heavy bike around.
I then started the bike, drove down the road, used the back brake a couple times, WHOA -- lots of drag on the rear brake! I only got 1 block from my house and turned around.
The rear brake was smoking like nearly on fire when I got her back home -- only reason I kept driving it with the rear brake sticking was --- I *knew* that if I didn't use the 900cc of power to overcome the dragging rear brake, I would have not been able to push it home.
I immediately got my fire extinguisher out of the garage -- luckily, no flames erupted.
The smell of the smoke was: the disc pads too hot.
Now just *what* might allow me to successfully bleed the brake, but the puck (apparently) in the caliper will not retract? This is a real simple caliper -- only one puck.
Could this dragging be caused by the master cylinder I just bought and installed? That would be odd, because I was able to bleed the rear brake in 5 minutes -- despite the fact that the brake hose was full of air, and the reservoir and the master cylinder were also full of air, as was the caliper. The master cylinder seems to be functioning -- at least as far as pushing the puck against the brake pads and the rotor.
Before I bled the system today, I had *completely* disassembled and cleaned the caliper, removed that internal o-ring and cleaned the groove, then wiped it all down with rubbing alcohol, which evaporates quickly.
Then, before re-installing that internal O-ring in the caliper, I slid the puck in-and-out of the caliper after rubbing some brake fluid on the outside of the puck and on the inside of the caliper bore. The puck slid in-and-out just fine.
ANY IDEAS? I will need to let it cool down for a while before I can get at it.