Long winded post, but please bear with me. I'm trying to give as much info as possible...
Bike is a '78 550K with dual disc conversion and braided steel lines. Since doing the conversion, I haven't been able to get the brake or lever feel that I think it should have.
I'm confident that it doesn't have air in the system. I've bled three bottles of fluid through it. I tried bleeding it at the banjo bolts. I bench bled the master cylinder. I tried three different master cylinders: stock (known good...came on the bike with the single disc), a GL1000 and a modern aftermarket 14mm bore master cylinder that's currently on the bike now.
The lever is soft and the brakes don't have the "bite" they should, IMO. Today, I installed new EBC pads on both sides. Put it all back together and the front wheel is locked. Ok, that's sort of to be expected with new pads.
I confirmed that both calipers are working and both pistons are moving. I pushed the pistons back in as far as I could by hand, hopefully forcing any remaining air back UP to the master cylinder (I've had excellent results using this method on my XS650's).
I loosened the caliper on the RH side and adjusted the stock, LH side as usual . I can make the LH side completely loose, tighten until it drags, then back off and set the lock-nut. Good...now I know that side is OK.
Try to do the same on the RH side and the wheel locks up again. I have to loosen the caliper arm adjusting screw WAY out. I also have to loosen the caliper halves to even turn the adjusting screw, then re-tighten.
Took a good look around and saw that the bottom of the caliper arm had begun to touch the fork leg. "Aha!", I thought....it's bottoming out on the fork before I can get it adjusted correctly. I remember the DDC instructions saying that shimming may be necessary.
Found a washer to shim it out and ....no luck. Better, but still locks the wheel up. I can turn it by hand, but with much force.
The new EBC pads are MUCH thicker than the stock pads, even accounting for wear. Especially the stationary inner pad. I'd say it's twice as thick (sorry, didn't get pics).
I remember my Dad encountering this same thing when he installed EBC pads on his XS650. Properly adjusted, it still had too much drag. His solution was to ride it for a couple hundred miles and re-adjust. I rode up and down my street about five times and the RH rotor got pretty hot. I don't want to warp the rotor.
All visual inspections show that everything lines up. Caliper arms are the same side to side, pad thickness is the same side to side, clearance between the arm and the forks is the same side to side, etc., etc.
I'm seriously considering removing the inner pad on the RH side and taking a belt grinder to it! I think if I could get the thickness down some. I could get the RH side to adjust properly. Or, I could just take it out on the highway and ride it for 100 miles, keeping good air flow on it.
Opinions? Options? Ideas?