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A brake caliper converts hydraulic pressure into clamping force at a disc brake. When the pedal is pressed, brake fluid moves one or more pistons, pushing the pads against the rotating disc. The resulting friction slows the wheel and turns vehicle energy into heat. Caliper stiffness, piston condition, seal integrity, pad movement and mounting alignment all influence braking consistency.
Calipers may be floating or fixed. A floating caliper usually has piston pressure on the inboard side and slides across guide pins to apply the outer pad. A fixed caliper is rigidly mounted and uses opposed pistons. Rear units may incorporate a mechanical handbrake mechanism or an electric parking-brake motor. Similar castings can differ in piston diameter, hose thread, bleed-nipple position, mounting spacing and handedness.
Identify the correct unit using registration or VIN, axle, side, disc diameter and thickness, engine or brake option, production date and any manufacturer code on the original caliper. Confirm whether the carrier, guide hardware, parking-brake motor, hose bracket and fitting kit are included. A left-hand unit must not be fitted on the right if this places the bleed screw below the fluid chamber, because trapped air may remain.
Typical faults include fluid leakage, uneven pad wear, pulling, overheating, a wheel that will not rotate freely, a soft pedal, damaged dust boots or parking-brake warnings. A sticking caliper can overheat the disc, tyre and wheel bearing; an active hydraulic leak can cause serious loss of braking. Do not drive where braking is reduced, fluid is escaping or a wheel is becoming dangerously hot.
Replacement requires clean brake-fluid practice, correct hose handling, specified bolt torque and a thorough bleed. Electronic parking brakes may need diagnostic service mode, while some rear pistons must be rotated as they retract. Renew contaminated pads, inspect the disc and flexible hose, and verify free movement and balanced braking before road use. Brake calipers matching the selected vehicle are listed below.
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The caliper is the hydraulic actuator and structural clamp of a disc-brake assembly. Master-cylinder pressure acts over piston area to create force. Pads transmit that force to both faces of the disc, and friction produces a torque opposing wheel rotation. The caliper must contain pressure, resist distortion, release cleanly and survive water, salt, vibration and repeated heating.
Braking balance depends on the designed piston area and effective disc radius. Substituting a caliper merely because its mounting holes align can change pedal travel, front-to-rear balance and electronic stability-control assumptions.
| Design | Construction | Typical service focus |
|---|---|---|
| Single-piston floating | One hydraulic piston; body moves on guide pins. | Slider corrosion, boots, carrier lands and inner/outer wear balance. |
| Twin-piston floating | Two pistons on one side with sliding body. | Both pistons must move evenly and the bridge must remain aligned. |
| Fixed opposed-piston | Rigid body with pistons on both disc faces. | Piston synchronisation, cross seals or pipes and pad-retaining hardware. |
| Mechanical rear caliper | Internal screw or lever applies piston for parking brake. | Lever return, cable travel and specified wind-back procedure. |
| Electric parking-brake caliper | Motor and reduction gear operate an internal mechanism. | Diagnostic service mode, connector protection and calibration. |
| Performance multi-piston | Stiff body, several piston sizes and large pad area. | Correct disc, wheel clearance, bleed sequence and axle balance. |
Hydraulic force rises with pressure and piston area, but usable braking also depends on pad friction, disc radius, tyre grip and temperature. Caliper body deflection consumes pedal movement and can taper pads. Piston sizing in multi-piston units may be graduated to reduce uneven pressure along a long pad.
The piston transfers fluid force to the pad. Its surface must pass through the square-section pressure seal without tearing it. Corrosion, plating loss or dirt can cause sticking or leakage. The seal sits in a precisely machined groove and should be lubricated only with an approved brake-assembly medium or compatible fluid.
The boot excludes road contamination from the piston interface. Floating designs also use guide pins with flexible gaiters. Torn rubber permits corrosion; incompatible grease can swell boots and seize motion. Some pins differ upper to lower and must not be swapped.
The carrier supports brake torque and locates the pads. Stainless abutment clips, springs and retaining pins control movement and noise. Rust beneath a clip can squeeze a pad even when its visible surface looks clean.
The bleed nipple must be at the high point of the hydraulic cavity. Banjo bolts generally use new sealing washers, while threaded hose unions require clean, undamaged seats. Twisting a hose during installation can restrict flow and stress the reinforcement.
| Material or feature | Reason used | Inspection concern |
|---|---|---|
| Cast iron body | High stiffness, durability and economical production. | External rust is common; assess structural section and sealing areas. |
| Aluminium body | Reduces unsprung mass and conducts heat. | Threads, galvanic corrosion and bore coatings need care. |
| Steel piston | Strength and dimensional stability. | Plating damage leads to corrosion near the seal. |
| Phenolic piston | Low heat transfer and corrosion resistance. | Cracks, swelling or edge damage require replacement. |
| EPDM seals | Compatible with specified glycol brake fluids. | Mineral oil and petroleum grease can cause destructive swelling. |
| Paint or plated finish | Slows external corrosion. | Coating must not contaminate bores, threads or sliding faces. |
| Check | Why it matters | How to confirm |
|---|---|---|
| Axle and side | Mounting, hose routing and bleed position are handed. | Catalogue designation and orientation on the vehicle. |
| Disc dimensions | Bridge opening and piston position suit a defined thickness and diameter. | Brake option data and measured disc specification. |
| Piston diameter | Changes hydraulic displacement and clamp force. | Part data or clean measurement of the original. |
| Mount spacing | Determines alignment to the disc. | OE reference and carrier/caliper drawings. |
| Hose connection | Thread, sealing face and bracket position vary. | Compare union type and routing before opening hydraulics. |
| Parking brake | Cable, lever, motor and software differ. | Physical inspection and vehicle build specification. |
Use only the brake-fluid specification stated by the vehicle manufacturer. DOT classifications describe important boiling and viscosity characteristics, but do not authorise mixing every product. Glycol-based fluid absorbs moisture over time; silicone DOT 5 is fundamentally different and is not a casual substitute. Mineral-oil hydraulic systems require their own specified fluid.
Dragging brakes can raise temperature enough to boil fluid, harden seals, discolour paint and damage wheel bearings. A heat-affected caliper should be assessed with the hose, pads, disc, fluid and nearby components rather than repaired in isolation.
| Symptom | Likely possibilities | Urgency |
|---|---|---|
| Fluid at piston or boot | Failed seal, corroded piston or bore. | Do not drive; hydraulic leakage can reduce braking. |
| One wheel very hot | Sticking piston, sliders, hose or parking mechanism. | Stop safely and allow diagnosis before further travel. |
| Inner pad worn faster | Piston not releasing or outer pad/caliper movement restricted. | Repair before the pad reaches its backing plate. |
| Outer pad worn faster | Floating body stuck or pad seized in carrier. | Inspect sliders and support surfaces. |
| Vehicle pulls while braking | Unequal clamp force, contamination, hose or suspension/tyre fault. | Investigate promptly; do not replace parts by guesswork. |
| Soft pedal after service | Air, leak, poor bleed sequence or excessive clearance. | Do not road-test until a firm pedal is restored. |
| Parking-brake warning | Motor, wiring, mechanism or calibration fault. | Read diagnostic data and secure the vehicle independently. |
Professional remanufacture may include full stripping, measured inspection, renewed pistons or guides, compatible seals, pressure testing and controlled finishing. A cosmetic seal change cannot rescue a deeply corroded bore, damaged bridge or stripped mounting thread. The supplied exchange unit should be compared before the old core is returned.
Larger calipers need compatible discs, pads, master-cylinder capacity, wheels and axle balance. Increased piston area can lengthen pedal travel; reduced area can increase effort. Road upgrades must preserve ABS and stability-control operation, legal wheel clearance and insurer acceptance.
The MOT checks braking operation, imbalance, efficiency, hydraulic leakage, insecure or damaged components and relevant warning indicators. A seized or leaking caliper may fail and can be classed as dangerous. Test compliance is only a minimum: any active fluid loss, severe pull, poor pedal or overheated brake requires action immediately rather than waiting for the annual inspection.
Q: Should brake calipers be replaced in pairs?
A: Not automatically, but both sides must be inspected and braking balance confirmed; pads and discs are normally axle-pair items.
Q: Why is the bleed nipple position important?
A: It must release air from the top of the hydraulic cavity; a low nipple can leave a compressible pocket.
Q: Can a sticking caliper damage a wheel bearing?
A: Yes. Sustained brake heat can affect the bearing, tyre, fluid, pads and disc.
Q: What causes uneven pad wear?
A: Restricted sliders, piston drag, carrier corrosion, disc condition or pad fit can create different inner and outer wear.
Q: Can I push every rear piston straight back?
A: No. Some must rotate, and electric units often require diagnostic service mode.
Q: Is a torn dust boot an MOT failure?
A: Assessment depends on condition and effect, but the caliper should be repaired before contamination causes seizure or leakage.
Q: Why does a new caliper still bind?
A: A collapsed hose, seized pad, carrier fault, parking cable or contaminated fluid may remain.
Q: Which grease is safe on guide pins?
A: Use only the lubricant specified for that brake and compatible with its rubber boots.
Q: Can brake fluid from an opened bottle be reused?
A: Avoid old or contaminated fluid; glycol fluid absorbs moisture and cleanliness is critical.
Q: Must contaminated pads be replaced?
A: Yes. Pads soaked with brake fluid or grease cannot provide reliable friction.
Q: What does a blue or purple disc indicate?
A: Severe heat exposure, often from dragging or hard use, requiring inspection of the complete corner.
Q: Can I drive with a small caliper leak?
A: No. Any hydraulic brake leak can worsen and compromise stopping ability.
Q: Will a seized caliper fail an MOT?
A: It can cause excessive imbalance, poor efficiency or overheating and may be dangerous.