so GM is retarded. we all knew that.
anyway, i'm using a set of rear calipers (need e-brake calipers) and for some reason GM put a hole in the face of the piston. it's supposed to be sealed off by the inner piston that ratchets on the e-brake screw, but usually that inner piston seal dies and it starts to weep fluid. the inner seal is not serviceable.
so is there any reliable way to seal that hole? i've considered a screw/EPDM o-ring, JB weld (it can handle 500F continuous/600F peak and is tolerant to brake fluid) and brazing it shut. i'm afraid brazing it would warp the piston.
should i just try the JB weld? worst that can happen is it fails and leaks a tiny bit of fluid. it won't leak enough pressure to cause the brake balance to change.
any other ideas? i picked these calipers because they're the right piston area to match the porsche front calipers, they're light, they're cheap and they don't need to come off to change pads (remove pin, slide pads out the top).
anyone have any temperature data from the piston face? i know the pad faces can see upwards of 1600F, but these are rear calipers, and the pistons are on the other side of the pad material. maybe a titanium insulator plate would help.
i know they can get hot enough to boil fluid, but usually when you boil the fluid it's because the fluid is old and wet and the boiling point is significantly lower under those conditions than the 500F JB weld can handle..