JimSmith |
11-13-2007 11:13 AM |
The only time a core charge will be refused is if you hand the guy a caliper that is not repairable by visual inspection, meaning if the thing is cracked in half, or one of the ears with a bolt hole is broken off, etc. Other than that, the previous sentiments noted are correct - you are replacing it because it is broken.
The rebuild guys will turn down/grind/polish the pistons and rechrome and final size them, along with the cylinder bores. For a proper rebuild these tolerances are beyond what anyone is going to do without special tooling. They recover most of the returned cores as very few have real damage that won't be addressed by the rebuilding procedure.
I have used a "C" clamp to break a piston free in the past. Just be careful you don't punch through the caliper wall (that will make your core charge non-refundable). And, rebuilding works if there is no damage to the area that contacts the rubbing seal, the square cross section rubber ring that goes in the bore groove on the piston. If there is, well, the fix doesn't last long,
Good luck, Jim
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