Machined a small amount of metal off both the caliper and the fork leg using a Dremel sanding drum. That is a good tool for the job, as it is small and it allowed me to remove the metal from the fork leg boss, but leave the front surface untouched, so there is still a full concentric ring of metal round the bolt..
Took less than 1mm off the caliper and 1 to 2mm off the fork mount.



Removed all pistons and gave caliper and m/c a good clean and reassembled all covered in new brake fluid.
I then removed the old brakes still fully assembled so there was no risk of fluid spill. If you remove the lever blade, the horn, and losen the LH bar, you can lower the master cyl down past the throttle cable and out teh bottom of the faring.
I laid the assy out on newspaper, put the new m/c and calipers beside the old parts and then swapped the SS hoses over one joint at a time [fitting new copper washers].
Then to save mess & fluid spills on the bike, I did most of the bleeding off the bike, with the m/c on an old handlebar in the workmate.
This allowed me to reach everything from one place, and also flush through with a syringe and bleed at all 3 banjo bolts without worrying where the fluid was going.

Then clean everything with brake cleaner [i think i should leave the door open next time, as i was getting a bit high on the fumes!] , lever removed and the new m/c threaded back up through the faring and throttle cables.
calipers fitted:


have to go to USA next week, so it will stay like that till I get back [and get new pads] and I will then finish the bleeding on the bike.