Working on another GS clean up (GS850 this time) and both front brake calipers have corrosion pitted pistons, the master cylinder bore is corrosion pitted, and the entire system is full of brown gelling brake fluid. The rear was in better shape; no pitting but the fluid was all brown and chunky.
For all you guys bringing back these long off the road GS's, please make sure you do a full system tear down to clean out all the old fluid and inspect the metal parts for corrosion pitting. Flushing does NOT get all the chunks out plus, you may have damage lurking so it's best to refurb the system properly by performing a full tear down. If you need pistons/seals, only use OE parts, not that K&L crap that normally reputable places like Z1 sells. Replacing all the seals is generally recommended, but not strictly necessary as long as the system wasn't leaking before. Also, replace those old rubber brake lines. They gather a layer of scum on the inside so even if you clean the calipers and master, the scum will contaminate your clean brake fluid when you refill. Suzuki calls for replacing the brake lines every two years, which obviously is excessive, but if your bike still has the rubber lines installed you should be aware that you are about 28 years overdue for this maintenance.:-\\\
For all you guys bringing back these long off the road GS's, please make sure you do a full system tear down to clean out all the old fluid and inspect the metal parts for corrosion pitting. Flushing does NOT get all the chunks out plus, you may have damage lurking so it's best to refurb the system properly by performing a full tear down. If you need pistons/seals, only use OE parts, not that K&L crap that normally reputable places like Z1 sells. Replacing all the seals is generally recommended, but not strictly necessary as long as the system wasn't leaking before. Also, replace those old rubber brake lines. They gather a layer of scum on the inside so even if you clean the calipers and master, the scum will contaminate your clean brake fluid when you refill. Suzuki calls for replacing the brake lines every two years, which obviously is excessive, but if your bike still has the rubber lines installed you should be aware that you are about 28 years overdue for this maintenance.:-\\\
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