Changed the fluid and bled the brakes... old pads had plenty of life left.
I had no spillover when I removed the cap, here is where I fill the res after bleeding and added more fluid. So, here is where I agree with Vic. Something is being broken-in on the drag? My brakes are sensitive or they are a softer compound and that's the diff?
installed new pads pumped up the brakes
Here is where I leave the cap on and just push the pistons back into the calipers. Still no weep out of the cap threads; I push those pistons in so I have max diaphragm collapse. Sounds like this is one drop short of leaking out the cap vent slot?
The new pads being thicker then the old raised the fluid level
Here is where the fluid is taking up piston space so you still have to compress fluid [mass] before the pistons move... so the pedal-lever feels spongy.
this caused my brakes to require next to nothing lever imput. Bled off a little fluid now everything is ok
This now has a caliper with less liquid to compress between piston and caliper bore. This now moves piston faster, so the lever-pedal now feels responsive.
Conclusion:
I did not mention having drag on the disc if I have forced pressure at the diaphragm? I am not complaining about brake squeaks or the initial drag glazed over the pads, no, this was not mentioned as if this would cause the discs to drag, but no?
I have no drag, figured out a perfect fluid to compress the diaphragm so no leak out the cap, but look ma, stoppies like no tomorrow. What are the odds no drag at the discs? Interesting, because the OP could [still] tell the difference something was up?
Tormenting the motorcycling community one post at a time