โSep-30-2013 08:42 AM
โOct-15-2013 06:39 AM
โOct-14-2013 02:21 PM
โOct-14-2013 01:52 PM
โOct-05-2013 11:23 AM
โOct-05-2013 08:15 AM
โOct-03-2013 12:25 PM
j-d wrote:
By how much is it too thick?
MEX suggested having it turned to get it true anyhow.
There was discussion about what made it thicker, the two "platters" that have the braking surface, or the "honeycomb" in between the platters? If there's more "meat" in the platters (same honeycomb thickness as the one your're replacing) then cutting them down a little should turn out OK.
What about what I'll call "offset" where I mean how the rotor ends up inside the caliper gap? The offset I'm thinking of could measure from the bearing race to the center of the honeycomb.
I don't remember what the coach was, but somebody on this forum had to take a new rotor that otherwise fit but the Diameter was too big. Had the edge machined off of it, reducing diameter by a fraction of an inch. I don't remember if it was 1/8 or 1/4 or as much as 1/2 (inch) but everything else was OK and it worked after.
I hate to ask another question, but is the face of the braking surface wide enough (from edge to hub) for your pads?
You could of course machine the Pads down, but that wouldn't be my first choice. For no other reason, all of a sudden you need new pads during a trip. You don't want to be crouched on a concrete sidewalk trying to work'em down.
If you weren't able to get the exact replacement rotor, then I'd say take your worn one and new one to an automotive machine shop and ask if they can make the New the same as Old started out.
I also suppose the later model chassis had a different caliper, but trying to find and install that could be another can of worms.
โOct-03-2013 10:23 AM
โOct-03-2013 07:53 AM
โOct-01-2013 10:37 AM
โOct-01-2013 07:00 AM
bucky wrote:
There is a reason the parts place needs to know what you are working on. A better employee or a different parts chain could have sold you the correct parts without all this screwing around. The lock washers were on there for a reason. If that part was the only choice I would have had them turned rather than compromise the hardware and perhaps your safety.
โOct-01-2013 06:53 AM
j-d wrote:
You've confirmed that the new rotor is thicker, and that you restored clearance to the shield screw heads. Have you also confirmed that there's enough clearance within the caliper to accept new pads and the thicker rotor, still leaving space so the brake can release?
โOct-01-2013 06:51 AM
SuperDutyFiver wrote:
Well if it may have been an issue on the other side as well I'd just go with it the way you got it together-Of course taking a good test drive to make sure all is good-even maybe pulling the wheel to do a visual afterwards!
Bigger concern-did you figure out why one side wore faster?
were the contact points the pads ride in a mess?
Do they make retrofits for those old capipers to add some kind of stainless shims to eliminate the 'stickiness' your pads may have experienced?
โOct-01-2013 03:48 AM
โSep-30-2013 05:49 PM