jimmyg wrote:tsa, can you recommend a grease? I assume the grease is applied to the seals as well as the pistons? Liberally or lightly?
I will point to Barry's advice wrt grease; find some "red rubber grease". I actually hate generic and/or proprietary names instead of what products actually are, if "rrg" seems to be impossible to find, ask one of your local brake specialist shops. Perhaps other manufactures produce blue brake grease
I concentrated most on greasing the area "outside" the piston seals, under the dust seal, and the contact area between piston & brake pad. I used what I had at hand, a brand specific anti-squeal back-of-brake-pad-grease, which I assume has a VERY high melting point so it doesn't leak out and onto the pads. I tend to use grease sparingly, too much and it may allow dust to stick and greate a grinding paste. Same approach as to the drive splines.
With many previous owners and pad changes, the area covered by the seal of such old caliper pistons have been pushed in and out of the calipers several times, and if any salt/dust/moisture has leaked past the dust seals it may have had plenty of opportunity to start corroding the chrome layer of the pistons. Hence my current approach to take apart and clean old brake calipers (as far as my skills allow me) as a preventing measure.
Good luch with yours, I hope you find them without any significant corrosion!