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The mkiv Supra Owners Club

Calipers refurbished. Where?


LOGIE
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i've used biggred in the past- prob about 7 years ago now, but they did a blinding job and had good service from what i remember.

 

i've quite a few good nick parts / spares for Jspec in the garage now i've removed them if of interest. when i did my celica i bought another set to have refurbished then just swapped them for the ones on the car. That way the car was off the road for minimum time. Just an idea if you hadn't already thought of that :thumbs:

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i've used biggred in the past- prob about 7 years ago now, but they did a blinding job and had good service from what i remember.

 

i've quite a few good nick parts / spares for Jspec in the garage now i've removed them if of interest. when i did my celica i bought another set to have refurbished then just swapped them for the ones on the car. That way the car was off the road for minimum time. Just an idea if you hadn't already thought of that :thumbs:

 

Thanks mate. This whole refurb is a bit more expensive than I thought.

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...or go for a set of 4 pot lexus calipers. In 8 years of na ownership the calipers have been the only recurring problem and the amount of money I've spent on second hand calipers and then refurb kits from Toyota would easily have paid for a set of uk spec brakes.

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...or go for a set of 4 pot lexus calipers. In 8 years of na ownership the calipers have been the only recurring problem and the amount of money I've spent on second hand calipers and then refurb kits from Toyota would easily have paid for a set of uk spec brakes.

 

Would that be 4 pot fronts and 2 pot rears? Are these a straight fit? Ie no modifications? Cheers for the info

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Yep I might just save up mate. Ill DIY pretty much anything except brakes. Too dangerous if I get it wrong, ill leave refurb to the experts.

 

It's really not that hard to do if your competent at doing other mechanical jobs, popping the pistons

out and replacing the seals is very easy and pretty much only needs common sense applied to the job :)

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I thought the Lexus calipers were less likely to bind and were a close alternative in terms of braking ability to the uk specs, but at a fraction of the price and considerably lighter too. There's a set for sale on here, they require a little modification to fit (there's a how to somewhere I think).

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Not sure why they would be less likely to have problems compared to UK spec calipers, they

would be better than the j spec sliding carrier type as they are an opposed piston set up so

no sliding pins to seize, same as the UK's.

 

The outer dirt/moisture seals will still fail which will cause the pistons to seize exactly

the same as they do on the UK's, my Landcruisers 4 piston fronts suffered this just before i

bought it and had brand new OE front calipers fitted and thats a 55 plate with 70,000 miles

on the clock

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