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1980 D3 Z1R Front Master cylinder
- 1980 Z1R D3
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I am currently restoring my father's old 1980 Z1R, and am having a bit of trouble with the front master cylinder/brake system. I have completely rebuilt the front calipers with all new seals and have blown out the brake lines. I used another post on this forum as a guide to disassemble the front master cylinder. I completely disassembled it, cleaned it thoroughly, including the pinholes in the little reservoir on the top of the master, and reassembled it with the same parts as none had glaring visual issues. I put it all back together and put some brake fluid in the main reservoir and attempted to bleed brakes... nothing. I took the end of the brake lines off of the calipers... completely dry. I pulled the brake lever in an attempt to push brake fluid through the lines, nothing happened. I took the brake lines off the master, also dry. The top reservoir of the master had fluid however, it just appears that the piston isnt pushing the fluid into the lines. I am considering buying a replacement piston and dust seal from Z1 enterprises as my next step. Please provide any insight into my situation that you can, anything at all. Please forgive me if I've missed something obvious i'm 18 years old and this is my first bike restoration
1980 Z1R D3
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- DOHC
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kzrider.com/forum/5-chassis/569907-z1r-f...tute?start=20#647373
www.kzrider.com/forum/5-chassis/608766-f...servoir-holes#786303
But even if everything is mechanically perfect, if you have air trapped in the system the master cylinder won't draw in fluid. There are tons of recommendations for this.
One thing you might try is to get a vacuum bleeder, attached to the calipers, and pull fluid though the system. Something like this.
www.amazon.com/HFS-Brake-Bleeder-Vacuum-Tuner/dp/B00NP60URE
www.amazon.com/MV8000-Automotive-Tune-up...eeding/dp/B00265M9SS
That's often good for about 90% of the trapped air. But often you're still left with a bubble. At that point the general recommendation is to let it sit for a day or two.
The idea is that this will let air trapped in the fluid separate, and then hopefully float up to the top to the master cylinder.
And many people say to tie the brake lever to the grip so the master cylinder piston is all the way pushed in. Many people here swear by this. It's possible that a common issue is air trapped in that small space between the two master cylinder piston seals. Pulling the lever in and letting it sit for some time would help to let this area fill with fluid.
'78 Z1-R in blue , '78 Z1-R in black, '78 Z1-R in pieces
My dad's '74 Z1
'00 ZRX1100
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- TexasKZ
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1982 KZ1000 LTD parts donor
1981 KZ1000 LTD awaiting resurrection
2000 ZRX1100 not ridden enough
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- martin_csr
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edit: connect clear tubing, of course, routed to a clear container w a few ounces of clean brake fluid.
Warning: protect the fuel tank & other stuff from brake fluid as Dot 3 will ruin paint. When shimming the caliper or pushing on the piston with the reservoir cap off or loose, brake fluid will squirt out the little reservoir holes & may leak at the cap. If the system is dry, then no problemo.
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- DOHC
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TexasKZ wrote: Another approach to a stubborn system is to use a Mityvac to push fluid into the system from the caliper.
Actually, since the Z1R has a remote reservoir, you could connect the pump in place of the reservoir and pump fluid into the master and out the calipers. This might be a bit less complicated. You're still pushing air down instead of up, but it should still prime the system and get most of the air out.
Combine that with elevating the calipers and you probably have a pretty good setup.
'78 Z1-R in blue , '78 Z1-R in black, '78 Z1-R in pieces
My dad's '74 Z1
'00 ZRX1100
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- DOHC
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'78 Z1-R in blue , '78 Z1-R in black, '78 Z1-R in pieces
My dad's '74 Z1
'00 ZRX1100
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- 1980 Z1R D3
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1980 Z1R D3
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- Rick H.
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Rick H..
Rick H.
1977 Kawasaki KZ-1000A1
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- 1980 Z1R D3
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1980 Z1R D3
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- 1980 Z1R D3
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Mini Bleeder
1980 Z1R D3
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- martin_csr
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It might help to watch some brake bleeding videos on youtube.
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