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Old 12-13-2007, 09:08 PM   #1
Pat
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I've done this a couple times. Once with hi-temp engine enamel and once with G2 caliper paint. I was very, very detail oriented when prepping the calipers for paint both times. I now wish I had never painted them. It's not a big deal, just a waste of time and money.
If I were to do it again, the only way I'd go is to have them powder coated. Of course, that is much more extensive than just painting them while on the car.
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Old 12-13-2007, 10:13 PM   #2
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god with the poser crap again...is that where every post is going tolead on this forum

paint em, my car is white and when its time to do my brakes, I want to paint the calipers white...idea from another forum member and I liked it....
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Old 12-14-2007, 07:05 AM   #3
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White sounds really hot and sporty. Cool idea. My boxster is black on black on black on black on.... gads. I thought about a cobalt blue because I don't like to do the same thing everyone else does, but I will probably go with red because it really does look nice. Your blue on white body colors might do well with blue calipers? Provided it was the right 'blue' and not a flat, navy sort of unsporty blue. Dunno. I prefer originality so white or blue appeal to me.
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Old 12-14-2007, 07:13 AM   #4
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there is a another boxster board and a guy painted his calipers a real cool blue, I thought t looked amzing......I will go with a high gloss white or maybe black....but my current black ones are just too faded...

I like the red a lot and would have done red, but the white idea just struck me as unique....I'm not sure I'd be a fan of the yellow on the white though....post some pics when you decide!
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Old 12-15-2007, 07:35 PM   #5
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Quote:
Originally Posted by super66
there is a another boxster board and a guy painted his calipers a real cool blue, I thought t looked amzing......I will go with a high gloss white or maybe black....but my current black ones are just too faded...

I like the red a lot and would have done red, but the white idea just struck me as unique....I'm not sure I'd be a fan of the yellow on the white though....post some pics when you decide!
Your car looks amazing as it is. That sounds like a really unique and striking idea to paint them white. You gotta post pics as soon as you get them painted!
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Old 12-14-2007, 07:14 AM   #6
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OK among all of us poser painters is there anyone who can describe the proper way to manage the end on the brake line and fluid flow from it when the caliper is totally removed?
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Old 12-14-2007, 10:08 AM   #7
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as 'cool' as white sounds, its a bad idea.
calipers get dirty all the time, and even a litle bit of dirt will make the white look bad.
you will be constantly cleaning then, well you will be cleaning them any color they are, but white will be just more work.
it would look good tho, on a white car, but so would red, it would stand out really nice
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Old 12-14-2007, 04:25 PM   #8
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Originally Posted by xusmnimij
OK among all of us poser painters is there anyone who can describe the proper way to manage the end on the brake line and fluid flow from it when the caliper is totally removed?
If I understand your question, you will not disrupt fluid flow when you remove a caliper. All you need to do is push the pistons into the caliper, and if done one at a time, will not pose a problem. If, however, you choose to do all four a once, you will need to open the brake fluid resevoir and drain some fluid out. When you press the pistons into the calipers, you push all the extra fluid back up the system and you will have an overflow at the tank (not a good thing). Be extra careful not to bend or kink a brake line. Also, only push the pistons back far enough to remove the pads; you don't want to damage the internal seals.

BTW, my S already has reds, but I know the "other" 911 guys always jump on the poser bandwagon. My friend has a beautiful 914 (white) and painted his tiny little calipers red...really nice improvement and he takes the prodding quite well.
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Old 12-14-2007, 04:55 PM   #9
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JM,

I've done a ton of brake jobs the way you describe, what I'm asking is this:

I want to completely remove the brake line from the caliper and take the caliper completely off to go out for painting. With a full fluid tank, the open line is going to continue to leak. In the Fiat days we carefully pinched off the line till we were done, I'd prefer a different method for the Box.
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Old 12-15-2007, 01:43 AM   #10
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I removed mine when I painted.

I simply removed the brake line where it enters the rear of the caliper, and then popped the end of the hose in a freezer food storage bag and then taped it around the hose to catch the leaking fluid.

I then found a bolt with the same thread to screw into the back of the calipers to prevent fluid leaking out whilst the paint was being done.

I gave mine a total of 15 coats:-


1) remove the calipers

2) cleaned the gunk off with brake cleaner

3) used a dremel and a wire brush end to clean in the hard to reach areas

4) used brake cleaner again to remove any residue

5) made some cardboard masks for the inside of the caliper and wrapped thin strips of masking tape around the bleed bolts (after removing the rubber caps from the bolts first).

6) I then bolted the calipers to a plank of wood to make handling painting easier.

6) gave them 4 thin coats of red oxide primer

7) gave them 5 coats of red gloss then left them to dry overnight

8) gave them 6 coats of lacquer and left top dry for the day

9) applied the decals

10) reattached the rubber caps and fitted the calipers to the car

11) Used an easibleed system to bleed them - right rear, left rear, front right, front left

12) Nice cup of tea and stand back and admire the work!

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