Front Rotor Freeplay Concern

Hi, did you remove the disc buttons or did you clean them while still attached to the disc? Was the sand paper wet when you deglazed the disc?
 
Well guys, spring has come so early this year I actually got to take my Rocket out in March for a short ride. Took the opportunity to fasten a bolt/nut combo and spin each disc button one at a time, pushing the rotor a bit sideways each way and the pulse is now gone. The buttons are still almost impossible to rotate by hand but with a drill spinning the bolt/button they freed right up. Gave each a squirt of WD40 to remove any accumulations. Some crap actually came out. Pleased..
 

i am sure u know this
but dont let that wd40 get on the brakes.
fork seals were leaking and the front brakes did not work well with oil on them
 
I found the easier, softer way. I forgot the size, but found a square type "easy out", that would go into the hole of the bobbin, and grab. Chucked up in my drill, and spun each one, while squirting with brake cleaner. Back and forth, both directions, and sorta work it around a little with the drill, while doing it. And you won;t believe all the cwap that comes out. Did both sides, now running "cool"
 
Saw that tip on U-tube so I tried this method when had bike down during winter. Very happy with the results, put bolts and nuts in pill bottle in tool box for next time.
 
Yes I did the same thing and it got rid of the pulse as well. I used brake cleaner spray though and spun the disc against some wet and dry sandpaper before replacing the pads.
 
Saw that tip on U-tube so I tried this method when had bike down during winter. Very happy with the results, put bolts and nuts in pill bottle in tool box for next time.
Can you share a link to that video. I'm always looking for tips to make maintenance easier.
 
Any brake rotor button cleaning video will work. There are many. No oily stuff on the discs is advisable. Simple green, brake cleaner. Rinse well. You are doing this once year perhaps. Just check them one in a while to see if they are loose. The R3 discs develop a lot of play. I don't know how much is too much. While you are at it, take your pads off, calipers off, extrude the pistons and clean them with brake fluid. Rinse well. They accumulate dirt and lock up of just don't compress. I just changed the seals and super cleaned them.
 
Might be a silly question but I'll ask anyway. After you extrude the pistons, does this mean that I'll need to bleed the brakes to get rid of air in the lines?