How easy it is to replace just the dust boot on a rear brake piston?
I'd really, really, like to not remove the piston completely. Brakes are working fine, but I ripped the rubber winding the piston back in - it was turning with the piston (corrosion in its seat, I guess) and eventually tore. Had to do it, because I need the car on the road.
Is it possible to wind the piston out enough to give it a bit of a clean up and replace the dust boot?
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Rear brake piston - dust boot replacement?
- Merlin
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It is simple but I wouldn't describe it as easy. Getting the boot back into the groove is tricky.
Pump the brake pedal a few times to push the piston out a bit. Make sure not to pump it out too far or it will be a a right PITA to get it back in. Clean up the piston, put the new boot on, wind it back in and try and get the lip of the boot back into the groove on the caliper.
Pump the brake pedal a few times to push the piston out a bit. Make sure not to pump it out too far or it will be a a right PITA to get it back in. Clean up the piston, put the new boot on, wind it back in and try and get the lip of the boot back into the groove on the caliper.
- Merlin
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It is a good couple of inches. What I mean by too far is that if you are using a piston wind in tool you need a certain amount of space to get the tool in-between the caliper and the piston. If you pump out the piston too far there isn't enough room to get the wind in tool in place. I accidentally did this first time and it took me ages to get the piston back in enough to use the tool.
- wurlycorner
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- Angus
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I foresee some excellent entertainment at the weekend, then.
Perhaps even more fun than a whole afternoon trying to get a stuck sliding pin out a couple of weeks ago. (soaking it in a tub of diesel eventually helped, and good job I had a spare pin in my toolbox following the dreadful thrashing the stuck one took ...)
Sounds like a plan to have someone hold the rewinding tool in place in the caliper whilst pumping the piston out to stop it going too far ...

Sounds like a plan to have someone hold the rewinding tool in place in the caliper whilst pumping the piston out to stop it going too far ...