May-04-2015 05:57 PM
May-05-2015 12:42 PM
May-05-2015 12:31 PM
May-05-2015 10:00 AM
May-05-2015 09:16 AM
May-05-2015 08:30 AM
May-04-2015 09:30 PM
May-04-2015 09:22 PM
May-04-2015 07:27 PM
May-04-2015 07:04 PM
May-04-2015 06:43 PM
May-04-2015 06:34 PM
May-04-2015 06:25 PM
j-d wrote:
I had a front caliper seize up just after leaving the ranger station check-in after a 50-mile highway run. Go figure. I went and got Hoses, Pads and Calipers for both sides. Changed the stuck side on the campsite (lucked out on that one) and the other side when I got home. After another couple runs, I could see the new pads weren't seating on the uncut rotors. Removed rotors, had them re-surfaced, packed bearings and installed new seals. Much better.
I was NOT able to remove the Rotors before getting home to bigger tools than I had with me on the trip! The brackets keep them from coming off and are held with large metric bolts with 21mm (or 13/16") heads. Torque spec is 160-pounds and ours also had rust. As an aside, I believe some shops "re-pack wheel bearings" by doing only the outer ones...
I'd change both calipers, all four pads, and both hoses. After a few miles, look and see if the overnight rust is being cleaned off both sides of both rotors. If not, have them re-surfaced. Unless they're discolored (blue) and/or checkered (surface cracked) then, replace.
EDIT: Seeing the other replies, everybody's diagnosis is the same. Wanted to add, previous owners replaced rear calipers and I just had to do it again. Brake wasn't smokin' but had that burnt-electrical, slipping-clutch smell. REAR calipers aren't as easy to change as the fronts, and I don't mean just getting jacked up and dual wheels off. Up through 2007, Ford used key-type retaining hardware and the keys are a pain to drive out, worse to put back. 2008 and later uses slide bolts like the front.
May-04-2015 06:21 PM
May-04-2015 06:12 PM
May-04-2015 06:09 PM
Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow