Thirty years ago, my friend Mark rebuilt the calipers on this 1965 Corvette by adding stainless steel sleeves to prevent corrosion of the bore of the cylinders. At the time they used the original piston. They replaced the seals with lip seals that were the original seal design that had a very high failure rate. The original pistons guided on a small bore at the bottom of the cylinder. In the following picture you can see the small bore at the bottom cylinder.
1. Full boss in place

Here you can see the post on the bottom of the old piston that used to guide in the small bore on the bottom of the cylinder.
2. Old piston with post

Because of the short life you can no longer purchase the old pistons. The newly designed cylinders eliminated the bore in the bottom of the cylinders.
3. New cylinder

The new pistons, which are available, eliminated the post on the bottom and added a raised ring on the bottom as shown below. They also replaced the lip seal with O-rings.
Unfortunately, the raised ring on the bottom of the new piston interferes with the split boss on the bottom of the old cylinders. As a result of the interference, you can’t retract the pistons enough to install the new brake pads.
4. New Piston without boss

The solution is to remove the boss around the bore, at the bottom of the old cylinder to eliminate the interference. In the process of machining for the stainless-steel, the machining vender also machined the side of the caliper. I took advantage of this new flat surface that was parallel to the center line of the cylinders, to clamp in my vise on the Bridgeport.
5. Setup for machining
1. Full boss in place
Here you can see the post on the bottom of the old piston that used to guide in the small bore on the bottom of the cylinder.
2. Old piston with post
Because of the short life you can no longer purchase the old pistons. The newly designed cylinders eliminated the bore in the bottom of the cylinders.
3. New cylinder
The new pistons, which are available, eliminated the post on the bottom and added a raised ring on the bottom as shown below. They also replaced the lip seal with O-rings.
Unfortunately, the raised ring on the bottom of the new piston interferes with the split boss on the bottom of the old cylinders. As a result of the interference, you can’t retract the pistons enough to install the new brake pads.
4. New Piston without boss
The solution is to remove the boss around the bore, at the bottom of the old cylinder to eliminate the interference. In the process of machining for the stainless-steel, the machining vender also machined the side of the caliper. I took advantage of this new flat surface that was parallel to the center line of the cylinders, to clamp in my vise on the Bridgeport.
5. Setup for machining
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