by nsaints » Mon May 28, 2018 6:54 am
I had an issue with a repro disc recently, and think it’s cured now. A few 100 miles will prove it.
My disc was fine as I took it for it’s first MOT in Oxford, about a 15 mile journey, it on the return at a set of traffic lights the front end bounced up and down on the suspension. It wasn’t something you could live with, it was pretty bad.
Someone mentioned it could be cheap pads, and as I had a spare set when I replaced them ensuring they didn’t bind in the hub holes and had plenty of clearance. But also I throughly decreased the disc Incase it was contaminated with oil, and cleaned the paint off the pins. Spent a good two hours cleaning and ensuring the pads fitted perfectly, and disc didn’t bind.
Made zero difference, still awful braking with the front bouncing on braking
It had to be the disc and I needed to get it machined, but first someone in the club had a spare innocenti disc I could try and prove it was the disc 100%
Bingo cured the issue straight away.
Posted this up on our clubs FB page and Pete who knows metal through his job stated that it’s likely as the disc was fine initially but quickly warped it’ll be low quality Far East metal. Pooly manufactured and heat treated. I could have it skimmed flat, but it’d soon reverted to warped again. Pete committed it’d be fit only for the bin when I mentioned it lasted 15/20 miles before starting the weird bouncing up and down thing.
So what I’ve done is bought an evergreen disc from scooter Centre. Just the internal disc. It needed 5mins on the internal diameter with the dremel. And braking is fine now.
BTW. My disc wasn’t bought from Cambridge Lambretta.
Edit: I’ll add whilst I was trying to work out the issue, I’d ridden the scoot to get it dyno’ d. Whilst there we mounted the disc on a lathe, but as it ran up to speed in the lathe it appeared to run true, so we didn’t bother machining it and thought it must be the pads, and went down the replacing the pads route up there ^^^