Nex
RIP CoronaRaptor
I was always taught to have someone hold the pedal while bleeding the brakes. Unless you have a vacuum pump.
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Not bleedingI was always taught to have someone hold the pedal while bleeding the brakes. Unless you have a vacuum pump.
Damn. Thats exactly what makuloco mentions here. Wish I had known that earlier.Just because your calipers failed in 90k does not tell me much. The truck at newest is 8 years old. I replace my brake fluid ever 2 years due to the water absorbing properties of brake fluid. On my track car every year. It is not uncommon for calipers to rust based on zero maintenance so unless you include what you have done.
If you are looking to replace your calipers, I highly recommend Power Stop. I just upgraded all 4 rotors with their drilled / slotted totors and pads. Amazing difference. I'm at 92,000 now, so once mine are in need of replacing that is what I will be going with. Quite a bit cheaper than Brembo.Wheel just won't spin freely. Doesn't drag real badly but, in neutral, started, spins about 1/4 rotation. Put a clamp on pads to pull in and spins. Checked bleeder and barely dribbles out so not line pressure problem. Guessing the piston just won't retract enough. Everything is clean. Slide pins are fine, regreased slider plates and cleaned/checked/greased piston seal.
Can't believe they could fail after only 90k miles. Most of the trucks life has been street and sitting. I've been off work sitting at home for 5 out of the 10 years of its life. I have a feeling all this salt thats used here is causing more problems then just rust. Not sure how it could get into a caliper though without fluid leaking.