So, a no pictures update.
I've been working on brakes. I had one new rear caliper, one used, with a pin seized in it, two fronts, and lots of missing bits. I ordered way too much stuff from my favorite on-line parts supplier. I'm leaving their name out, because I really do like dealing with them, and don't mean to detract from their good name.
Some pictures were wrong, descriptions labeled brake pins and bolts were bolts only. One thing labeled springs had a picture of the pins I needed,but turned out to be bolts only-NOT springs. Because all of this, I have maybe 5 extra sets of bolts for the rear calipers. I don't mind so much, because they were like 99 cents each.
I was determined to rebuild the front calipers, but really struggled with one front seal. I eventually figured out the seal was wrong-too big.
To cut to the chase, I rebuilt one caliper, ordered two new ones from the local parts house, which came with pins, and hardware. I should be able to cut one of the spare pins down to work on the rear, and voila, 4 refurbed calipers. I really took the long way around on that one.
So, the seals were $2 per wheel, a new front caliper $30, and the rear $70 (all numbers approximate). I'm glad I proved to myself I could rebuild the caliper, but doubt I'd do it again, unless I couldn't get the remanufactured ones. It's damn fiddly work. They don't check the cores for seized bolts or bleeders, both of which I had, and caused considerable greif to deal with. Still, learning is cool, and I'm definitely doing that.
In other news, a buddy moved from 10 acres to a boat Sonny Crockett style, and gave me buttloads of paint and stuff, so I'm using free caliper paint, and this stuff will be really pretty.