“fixing” a SEIZED brake caliber for $3 bucks (complete diagnostics)

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  • Опубликовано: 27 дек 2024

Комментарии • 567

  • @mmantov
    @mmantov Год назад +271

    You win the award for Best Edited Video. Not a second wasted with gibberish. I didn't have to fast-forward like I do for most videos.

    • @lowkeehkis2454
      @lowkeehkis2454 5 месяцев назад +2

      Tik tok brain😂😂😂 kidding

    • @th3r0d
      @th3r0d 5 месяцев назад +1

      2nd that

  • @dave-d
    @dave-d Год назад +83

    Excellent presentation. No muss. No fuss. Thanks for not wasting any time or bombarding us with crap music / intros / egos! Good work Bro.

  • @DeusTex-Mex
    @DeusTex-Mex Год назад +92

    This man showed yall how to fix ya car's seized brakes for THREE DOLLHAIRS and you're all jumping to criticize! Good on him, man's a real fixer not a parts cannon operator. And now he's still got the money he saved on those calipers.

  • @shinygoldshoes
    @shinygoldshoes 5 месяцев назад +6

    Fabulous video! No silly talk about silliness or overproduction, just straight and to the point good information! You just saved me a ton of time!

  • @thesetruths1404
    @thesetruths1404 Год назад +29

    This is the best complete and concise DIY on wheel stiffness cause I've found on the Internet. I had an issue with occasional noise and heat from one wheel hub. I thought initially it was bearing (only has 60,000 miles on new bearing) but then determined it was sticky brake caliper. Bravo!

    • @thesetruths1404
      @thesetruths1404 Год назад +5

      @@calwatch1496 it actually ended up being a stuck caliper and the bearing lol

  • @jjstak98h
    @jjstak98h 6 месяцев назад +15

    Nice, straightforward and to the point. I hate wasting my time on videos that have useless parts. Every second here had a point.

  • @LaurieFloodTeacher
    @LaurieFloodTeacher Год назад +104

    I really appreciated how you took the time to show what proper performance in a caliper would really look like and what poor performance looks like. This is the first video where the poster didn't assume that the audience would know what good and bad performance in a caliper looks like.

  • @Horsemanpro63
    @Horsemanpro63 Год назад +18

    great video, you went directly through the process, didn.t waste time on chatter, and explained the problem and the solution. Basically this video gets to the point and doesn't make you sit for 45 mins to see the results, thank you.

    • @dave-d
      @dave-d Год назад +3

      Absolutely. No crap music or shouty people. Just the facts. Rare!

    • @devinpaisley
      @devinpaisley 11 месяцев назад +1

      Amen!

  • @moss8448
    @moss8448 Год назад +95

    One thing I learned rebuilding a caliper piston is to not let the pedal go all the way to the floor. I went through several master cylinders (the NAPA guy at the counter thought they were bad masters) before I was told by a brake mechanic after explaining my issue, he said 'you're blowing your master cylinder seal when you go all the way to the floor, put a brick or block of wood behind the pedal to stop it from traveling all the way to the floor.' Sure enough by doing that it didn't blow out and was able to unfreeze both front calipers with those kits saving several hundred dollars.

    • @vanwahlgren8451
      @vanwahlgren8451 Год назад +3

      Good point thank you

    • @papimasfuerte4671
      @papimasfuerte4671 6 месяцев назад

      That's not true. Master has internal stop. You did not bleed the master before putting it on, thinking your master is bad.

    • @moss8448
      @moss8448 6 месяцев назад +5

      @@papimasfuerte4671 that MGB one had no stop it would go all the way and blow out the seal. went thru 3 til an old 'canic standing there said put a brick behind the pedal so it won't go to the floor. I had also did a bench bleed each time before buttoning it on. the brick deal worked in that particular case.

  • @colebraman597
    @colebraman597 Год назад +8

    I really appreciate your approach. Straight to the point but also including all the information you need

  • @eaglebride
    @eaglebride 9 месяцев назад +2

    Excellent video. Lots of great information and no useless filler.

  • @TheLaidbackBiker
    @TheLaidbackBiker Год назад +87

    With brake parts that look and function like that and with the relative low expense of all new parts, caliper, rotor, bracket, pads it just make more sense to buy and replace with new parts. I mean we are talking about brakes and the safety issue involved. I'm talking from over 50 years of experience of replacing, and dealing with brakes of all types. This video was good from the standpoint of showing how disc brakes work, which is nice for those who never saw this or didn't know how they worked.

    • @donziperk
      @donziperk Год назад +6

      Absolutely agree with you . Brakes and steering are not the place to cut corners.

    • @k9under
      @k9under Год назад

      @@donziperk Rebuilding your caliper is probably better than buying all this new crap from china.

    • @lloydbrown9327
      @lloydbrown9327 Год назад +3

      I agree, the time you spent on repairs ,better to get new parts!

    • @frankhoward7645
      @frankhoward7645 Год назад +24

      Sorry, but I disagree. While the brakes may look old and rusty, all that matters is if the cylinder bore is in decent shape and the rubber parts are renewed.

    • @Denise.Taylorx88
      @Denise.Taylorx88 Год назад +2

      Yeah, I am not putting that crap back in a vehicle… would not re-use any of those parts and there were literally no brakes left either… 😅😅

  • @foggymtnbreakdown
    @foggymtnbreakdown 22 дня назад

    Wow. This is so good. No stupid "guy" music. Concise. Right to the point. I learned more from this video than any other one I have come across.

  • @automatic7713
    @automatic7713 7 месяцев назад +1

    EXCELLENT.. The best kind of video.. punchy, straight to the point, absolutely NO EXCESS waffle or meaningless intro which I hate !
    Most US clips start with at least 2mins of obvious chat like " today, the weather's fine, so I'm gonna get to work on this here ole car blah blah" .. cut to the chase FGS. .and thankfully, you did.

  • @moerizk3753
    @moerizk3753 Год назад +5

    Man the pacing of this video is great. Quick simple explanation and presentation.

  • @ausbcorner3629
    @ausbcorner3629 6 месяцев назад +1

    What a great video with perfect diagnosis of problem instead of just replacing calliper but you never know what was the fault so that's the professional way to do a job.

  • @John223
    @John223 9 месяцев назад +1

    That screw and plate tool is so cool. I was struggling to get a piston open and never thought of something like this. I came for a bite of knowledge and I'm leaving with a full belly. Thank you!

  • @Tarsen-qb2ub
    @Tarsen-qb2ub 2 месяца назад +2

    props to you dude, and anyone who has the time a patience to do this. At this point I think I'd still rather just get a new caliper, but if I was flat broke, this is what I would be doing.

    • @VoodooZ
      @VoodooZ 2 месяца назад

      Mind you if you can afford a new caliper you might as well pay a mechanic to do it too. My new caliper (most likely refurbished) came with a seized piston so you never know..

  • @wonderwalls3565
    @wonderwalls3565 2 месяца назад +3

    Nice to see someoen who actually tries to fix things rather than replacing parts.

  • @joegatrill6634
    @joegatrill6634 10 месяцев назад +1

    Superb editing! I learned more in 5 minutes than i used to in a whole day of school. Cheers.

  • @andrewfava6226
    @andrewfava6226 Месяц назад

    Great little video packed with helpful info and no waiting for the good bits - it was all good! Excellent! Thank you.

  • @ghahandi
    @ghahandi Год назад +262

    That whole set-up appears to be on it's final days.

    • @donjulio5045
      @donjulio5045 Год назад +7

      Set-up is about to Break-Up

    • @matth4784
      @matth4784 Год назад +92

      You must be from California or Florida. By Chicago standards that bad boy is just getting started

    • @illiniwood
      @illiniwood Год назад +10

      @@matth4784 Fluid Film the crap out of it once a year if you wanna keep it long term.

    • @gabriels335
      @gabriels335 Год назад +7

      "nice and smooth"

    • @waynebinky
      @waynebinky Год назад +14

      Looks a lot like my 20yo car's brake calipers. She's been nursed along for the last 5 years with annual cleaning and lube of the sliders when the tires get switched but this year, she is getting all new coated calipers, rotors and shoes. Be good for another 20 years ;)

  • @lorettacaputo6997
    @lorettacaputo6997 Год назад +5

    Nice video. You are the first presenter that I have seen who addresses the grinding of the tabs of the brake pads to insure movement. When I got my Nissan X terra, every time that I needed new pads this was a critical part of the process. Just did a brake job on the vehicle and I still have some brake noise. I rebuilt the last set of calipers, so now I will swap out the current with the rebuilt then rebuild this set for future use. I prefer to work on the bench rather than on the vehicle.

  • @jojo4rmdabronx
    @jojo4rmdabronx 28 дней назад

    Proper way to diagnose and remedy this is issue. Thanks for not wasting our time

  • @DintClempsey
    @DintClempsey Год назад +7

    Was looking how big a job it would be to rebuild. Very informative video thank you so much. It’s helped even if only to show me that it’s not worth the time and effort when a new calliper is £35

    • @coasterjunkies
      @coasterjunkies Год назад +5

      Told the wife her caliper was frozen she send me a video of a link to repair and rebuild a caliper. I sent her the address to the Autoparts store and told her the caliper is waiting for her at the counter.

  • @Gyppor
    @Gyppor 17 дней назад

    Excellent, speedy presentation, and complete. Thank you!

  • @Mulesandmustangs
    @Mulesandmustangs Год назад +5

    Never knew about having play in the pads & the clips that hold em in. Just did my brakes yesterday and it was a snug fit in the clips. Going to take everything off tomorrow and make it right. Thanks for the great video.

    • @dopiaza2006
      @dopiaza2006 Год назад +1

      They should be a sung fit If you have play that's how you get brake squeal.

  • @kwacz
    @kwacz Год назад +15

    I just replaced brakes that were worn all the way down to metal pad. Caliper looked fine, compressed very easy. Moved in and out smoothly but would cause brake to drag when brake was released. After playing with this for a couple days I just replaced the caliper, but never saw anything wrong with it. Problem is now gone. Seems like the piston would only stick when under a load but when caliper was off vehicle worked perfectly.

    • @dopiaza2006
      @dopiaza2006 Год назад +1

      Soemtimes piston will only stick when they get warm. Tiny amount of sticking and/or usign the brakes creates heat, which causes more sticking. It's a vicious circle. I'have had cars where the wheel was almost too hot to touch after a drive but next day jac the car up and all is free. New piston or calliper is the only fix really.

  • @sunilcherianpullockaran8817
    @sunilcherianpullockaran8817 Год назад +16

    I know it is too late for a response being a 1-year-old thread, but for future DIY freaks, here is an insight. I had a confounding problem with my Chevy Cruze Diesel for more than 6 months when the calipers would not release after lifting the foot off the brake pedal once it got to high temperatures. The brake assembly used to be serviced the usual way at the authorized service centre by greasing the slide pins with appropriate grease from many different brands, but to no avail. The mechanic then felt it was the synthetic brake cylinder seal, but that too was not the culprit. I then decided to do a DIY of the problem and found out that the caliper pins were not the problem at all and neither was the piston rubber seal. The actual issue was with the front disc brake alloy pistons of the brake caliper assembly. Do not ask me why but the composition of the piston used in the Cruze Diesel in Bhaarath (India) was suspect as it enlarged minutely over time (it was not the brake cylinder rusting); I sanded it down and then cleaned it thoroughly and put back the assembly, and it has been a smooth ride ever since. Fuel efficiency too has gone up from 9kmpl to 14kmpl as there was severe drag from the brakes. Acceleration too has gone up by leaps and bounds. In my particular case, the piston was the culprit and not the sliding caliper pins, brake cylinder or the brake cylinder synthetic seal.

    • @sfcd4757
      @sfcd4757 Год назад +1

      Interesting story

    • @lothianmcadam1
      @lothianmcadam1 Год назад +2

      Thanks for taking the time to post your experience. I have the EXACT issue with my 2000 Accord as you had with your Chevy: The caliper will not retract after the brakes get hot. Before I found this video I performed the same repair to the piston, followed by a complete brake job for prudence sake. Immediately after a test drive the calipers would not retract and the wheel would seize.

    • @sunilcherianpullockaran8817
      @sunilcherianpullockaran8817 Год назад +3

      @@lothianmcadam1 has your issue not been rectified. If not then you need to sand down the pistons further as in my case, I tasted success only on the 4th attempt at sanding down the pistons.

    • @VoodooZ
      @VoodooZ 2 месяца назад +2

      Having the same issue with brand new (probably refurbished) front dual piston calipers for my WRX 2017. and of course they won't replace them because I arleady painted them. :( I've ordered new seals just in case and I won't have a choice to rebuild or unseize them now.. thank god I still have working old ones to drive in the meantime.

  • @lothianmcadam1
    @lothianmcadam1 Год назад

    EXCELLENT VIDEO! I have this EXACT problem on a 2000 Accord--same wheel! After I replaced both seals the wheel STILL seizes after a test drive, immediately after the brakes get hot. I've done this same job twice, completely replaced the brake fluid, and performed a complete brake job, and the caliper will not retract after the brakes get hot.

  • @aaronjump2193
    @aaronjump2193 Год назад +8

    Great work! I'm so glad I found this. Great to see every detail and with speed, and the reality that everyone doesn't have money to just get a rebuilt caliper where they do the exact same thing and charge you $80+.

    • @aaronjump2193
      @aaronjump2193 Год назад +2

      @@calwatch1496 for example and to remove unnecessary steps; like replacing all 4 brake pads at the same time, might be ideal but life isn't ideal and the calipers adjust so it ultimately matter. Some people might only have 3 bucks and etc.

  • @ronysmith1
    @ronysmith1 11 месяцев назад +1

    Nice! And Concise! I like that you're to-the-point.

  • @philliptoone
    @philliptoone 7 месяцев назад +1

    Wow, very thorough and concise. Thank you for such a good video.

  • @dennyspasseto
    @dennyspasseto Год назад +2

    Excellent diagnostic explanation. Thank you!

  • @connor3288
    @connor3288 Год назад +40

    I have been a mechanic for years. I do not recommend using brake lube on the the pad ears, but instead under the shims that the pads slide on. The issue that happens over time is the uncoated steel under the shim rusts and expands, pushing on the shims/pads making them tight. The proper solution is remove the shims, clean the rust, grease where the shim goes, then reinstall shims. This prevents the rust buildup under the shim. The shims always seem to be stainless steel in my experience and dont rust, pads slide easily across them without lube. The lube on pads can attract dirt and grime and be counter productive. I have not seen any new cars where the manufacturer greased the pad ears, but they do grease the slider pins obviously.

    • @TheCaperfish
      @TheCaperfish Год назад +5

      100 %. , so in vid he grinds pad ears down lol. NO NO NO remove abutment clips and clean and lube underneath them if not they will rust jack yer pads from moving ,

    • @connor3288
      @connor3288 Год назад

      @@TheCaperfish Yeah with high quality brands/pads/hardware you shouldnt have to grind pad ears to fit good. Sometimes the cheaper pads are not made as well with more variance in dimensions though.

    • @jimtheobald1141
      @jimtheobald1141 Год назад +2

      So if the caliber is clean and you install new clips and the pad is tight on the bracket maybe the pads are a little to big I do grind the pad down a few times. Master tech working at the largest dealership in the Minneapolis area

    • @sfcd4757
      @sfcd4757 Год назад

      Interesting. I never heard that before about lube and i've done hundreds of brake jobs. I will try that next time under hardware and not on the ears.

    • @fakeaccount8342
      @fakeaccount8342 Год назад +1

      Take a wire brush to the caliper bracket and spray with brake cleaner. Use Syl-Glyde for guide pins. ALWAYS lube under the shims AND the ears with antiseize.
      Auto Technician since 1994

  • @anotherm2722
    @anotherm2722 4 месяца назад +2

    Good info. Sometimes, the rubber brake hose going to the caliper can fail also.

  • @danieldesimonedanny1827
    @danieldesimonedanny1827 Год назад +31

    Fixed 100s during my working days. Rebuilt calipers where pretty cheap and a quick fix. The sliders are often overlooked.

  • @johndelong5574
    @johndelong5574 Год назад +2

    Brisk to the point editing, real world solutions. Perfect vid.

  • @rasmadrak
    @rasmadrak Год назад +78

    Be very careful when pumping out the piston completely. Worst case is it'll smash your fingers if the pressure is high enough.

    • @justarandomguy3969
      @justarandomguy3969 Год назад

      why the fuck would you have your fingers in the way?

    • @frankhoward7645
      @frankhoward7645 Год назад +7

      I believe that's only if you use compressed air to drive out the piston.

    • @BriarHood
      @BriarHood Год назад +1

      Just stick something in the caliper where the brake pads would be and shoot some air where the brake line would go.

  • @haydenbrooksarenburg3024
    @haydenbrooksarenburg3024 8 месяцев назад

    I suspect my RR caliper is seized, I've been noticing some squealing and I'm just praying I don't need to replace more than that. Excellent video, helped calm some of my nerves about this. I'm probably going to go check it out in a little bit while there's still daylight, and I'll check some of the easier ones as I'm still a novice (I'm an absolute tool, but as is the case with tools, at least I'm still useful!).
    Thank you so much for this short video!

  • @nickteetsel563
    @nickteetsel563 8 месяцев назад +3

    You should be the only man making car tutorial videos

  • @mkl5448
    @mkl5448 Год назад +2

    I too, like some of the other folks commenting, feel like a new caliper makes much more sense here. I would just go for a rotor, pads, calipers, bracket, and call it a day. Easily less than an hour of work per side, more money, but its all set for another decade with periodic checks in between. Just my opinion. Interesting video though, very good information and alternative.

  • @SiNo621
    @SiNo621 Месяц назад

    Hi great video, when you retracted the caliper, did you keep the bleeder screw lose?

  • @russoft
    @russoft Год назад +8

    this is amazing! I'll remember it for my next brake job. I generally don't mind spending the money on a new caliper, but if I can save a pile of money, I'll happily do that instead!

  • @horacesawyer2487
    @horacesawyer2487 Год назад

    If I was going to all that trouble I would take that rusted scaling falling to pieces to Caliper and apply RUST CONVERTER
    then paint it. You would have a brand new setup.
    However, I'm not the one who made a great video. Great job. Lot of work and good explanation.

    • @fakeaccount8342
      @fakeaccount8342 Год назад

      Sand blast them first, then paint and rebuild. 😎

  • @steventhechef1538
    @steventhechef1538 9 дней назад

    Excellent rundown. Thanks for posting

  • @whaleoilbeefhooked3892
    @whaleoilbeefhooked3892 Год назад +19

    I had a nightmare similar. In the end it was the rubber hose itself breaking down internally that caused a check valve effect where it took a minute (or so) for enough fluid to return to release the brake caliper pressure, whereas pressured was instant. New hose, no more problem.

    • @justarandomguy3969
      @justarandomguy3969 Год назад +1

      thanks, i will remember this for the future

    • @californiadreamin8423
      @californiadreamin8423 Год назад +1

      I’ve had this same problem twice. A simple solution but only after a mechanic friend suggested the problem.

    • @dave-d
      @dave-d Год назад

      Sneaky! Well found.

  • @ronmoore6598
    @ronmoore6598 3 года назад +18

    @4:35 In my, admittedly limited, experience, getting that boot installed completely into the groove is Way harder than you make it look (a critical step to keep water out). Also the pits you saw, and buffing the piston (will reduce the diameter and max pressure before leakage) both can allow leakage into the boot which could eventually blow it out.
    All this together means I'd rebuild another caliper if new is unavailable.

    • @msain427
      @msain427 Год назад

      They're like 40 bucks in Biden Money

    • @frankhoward7645
      @frankhoward7645 Год назад +2

      I disagree. Reducing the outside diameter of the piston won't affect it at all because it's the rubber O-ring that makes contact with the bore, not the piston. The only thing that would hurt would be if you reduced the diameter of the piston groove.

    • @ronmoore6598
      @ronmoore6598 Год назад

      @@frankhoward7645 if there is a pit or a low spot there's still a chance of leakage. Not worth it on something as important as breaks.

    • @frankhoward7645
      @frankhoward7645 Год назад

      @@ronmoore6598 I'm not talking about the bore. You said, "Also the pits you saw, and buffing the piston (will reduce the diameter and max pressure before leakage) both can allow leakage..." Buffing the piston resulting in a reduced diameter will not allow leakage because the piston doesn't contact the bore. The rubber O-ring does. If the diameter of the rubber O-ring was reduced (most likely through wear), THAT would allow leakage.

    • @ronmoore6598
      @ronmoore6598 Год назад

      @@frankhoward7645 Yeah, but if you're buffing the piston with, say, a Beartek pad, it can easily remove enough material to make a flat (or flatter) spot on the piston, which the O-ring can ride over or produce lower pressure against, allowing leakage into the boot and possible blow out. You do you, but, again, with something as important as brake it doesn't seem worth the risk to me.

  • @michaelreeves8164
    @michaelreeves8164 Год назад +19

    Looking at the caliper and rotors, I as an amateur mechanic would have bitten the bullet and replaced everything from the brake hoses out.

    • @carlosspiceyweiner3835
      @carlosspiceyweiner3835 Год назад

      hoses cannot last more than 15 years or 125,000 miles. And they can be the reason your pads will not release

    • @waynebinky
      @waynebinky Год назад +2

      @@carlosspiceyweiner3835 Highly doubt it being the hoses. I replace them if they start to get dried out and show signs of cracking. I have 20yo (360km) and 30yo (120km) vehicles and they are still fine. The 30yo went through a safety check 3 years ago and passed with flying colours. Replacing hoses can get ugly so why do it if it's not necessary?

    • @ReddNashe
      @ReddNashe 2 месяца назад +1

      I think his point was that if you can't afford the new parts and have the ability you can still make it through.

    • @ReddNashe
      @ReddNashe 2 месяца назад

      ​@@carlosspiceyweiner3835 great video but I was thinking that too.

  • @LyonhartZ2
    @LyonhartZ2 7 месяцев назад

    What a great video. I do the same on old rusty Motorcycles.. Except I only clean everything out I rarely get new seals (They get pretty expensive and if the originals are good, I keep em) I would have definitly removed the caliper for cleaning on the bench instead

  • @robertstephensoniii3681
    @robertstephensoniii3681 2 года назад +10

    Obviously you rebuilt the caliper so it should work like new but are the pads supposed to be dragging at the end when you demonstrate that the rotor spins?

    • @okdoky6472
      @okdoky6472 2 года назад +8

      Yes, the pads will always drag slightly when you spin the hub, but you should always be able to spin it by hand. If you ever have this same issue, it's much easier to just go buy a new caliper for $30, especially when one was in as bad a shape as this one was. But he rebuilt it... that works too. It's cheaper to rebuild but faster to replace the caliper, just depends if you have more money or more time. As for me, I have hardly any time, but l got $30.

    • @jontewatson6434
      @jontewatson6434 2 года назад +1

      Yea is drags..cause if working right the piston of the caliper release the pads slightly just a little so that the pads are open but resting on caliper

    • @robdobson5419
      @robdobson5419 Год назад +2

      @@okdoky6472 may I ask where you are getting calipers for $30? The cheapest I see for my car are remanufactured and they are around $59 a piece. Brand new are between $80-130 for OEM.

    • @htsauce420
      @htsauce420 Год назад +1

      @@robdobson5419 His car's calipers cost $30, not yours. I'd also add ceramic Akebono brake pads to keep things quiet.

    • @connor3288
      @connor3288 Год назад +1

      @@robdobson5419 It will vary wildly depending on the year make model trim of vehicle. On my 04 wrangler rubicon i think i paid about $160 for 4 Raybestos reman zinc coated calipers, through rockauto. Stay away from a1cardone i have heard bad experiences with them. I was going to rebuild, maybe paint mine, but for $160 it made more sense to me to buy them. They were all rusted badly.

  • @chenupy77
    @chenupy77 9 месяцев назад

    Hi Thanks for the post , is that AWD Honda, Coz i have same situation for my Subaru outback , The Rear wheels are very tight to sping when thyey are jacked up in Parking ,

  • @YoungShizzie
    @YoungShizzie Год назад +1

    Yea I’m hearing a clanking noise I’m my front drivers side breaks don’t know if it’s the break pads or the rusted caliber on my 2004 Honda accord ex sedan 2.4l v4 but something is grinding when i break

  • @LJT9393
    @LJT9393 Месяц назад

    Are you pressing the pedal with the cap on the master cylinder off? I’m sure you pulled it to compress the piston. Can you press the pedal with the lid off?

  • @bezkintsakintsa357
    @bezkintsakintsa357 Год назад +527

    for those of you watching, this is a WHOLE day affair, sometimes just worth it to get a new caliper.

    • @rasmadrak
      @rasmadrak Год назад +38

      I agree. In case there's a broken seal/rubber or any corrosion is found - a new caliper is almost always a better choice.

    • @MartinX192
      @MartinX192 Год назад +32

      1 maybe 2 hours if you have the correct polishing tools

    • @livestock9722
      @livestock9722 Год назад +30

      Unless you have a Land Rover, and no one but a stealership will sell you front calipers for grossly overinflated prices.

    • @bezkintsakintsa357
      @bezkintsakintsa357 Год назад +6

      @@livestock9722 ahaha land rover is def the exception. Not a ford or a civic

    • @rasmadrak
      @rasmadrak Год назад +9

      @@MartinX192 It depends on what type of rust and how deep it goes. Anything below surface rust is a big no-no.

  • @hnng3919
    @hnng3919 Год назад

    When you remove the caliper (or brake hose) to work, what about the leaking fluid? What if the leak empty the reservoir? Or goes down too low? Thx

  • @paulhead
    @paulhead Год назад

    Straight forward thank you. Didn't get a story teller about how his goat ate his roses.

  • @saulmarques1934
    @saulmarques1934 Год назад +3

    Awesome, my Ford is giving me a brake that feels like a piston issue. Now, after watching your video, it will be a piece of cake diagnosing it. Thank you

  • @24revealer
    @24revealer Год назад +3

    I appreciate the video. Thanks for making it.

  • @michaelallen5505
    @michaelallen5505 Год назад +2

    I see mechanics going 50/50 on using brake grease on the pad ears. Bendix recommends using grease on top of the clips (shims are actually what you used to put on the back of the pads) in their RUclips video, Bendix Brake Pad Installation. I use a wire wheel where the pad clips attach to the caliper bracket and use brake parts cleaner to remove every bit of rust. Then put a little ceramic brake grease where they contact the bracket and use a little on top of the clips like in the Bendix video. I also like to remove the slide pins, flush the hole with brake cleaner and blow out with compressed air, clean and lubricate the pins with Sil-Glyde. Make sure the top of the pistons are clean but be careful about damaging the boots or damaging the pistons if they are phenolic, not metal. Most quality modern pads don't require adding anything to the back to quiet them, they are pre-shimmed. Also very important to check the hoses if the brakes have been sticking. The 3 main reasons for sticking brakes are stuck pins, stuck pistons or bad hoses that have collapsed on the inside.

  • @ShukokaiStu
    @ShukokaiStu Год назад

    Excellent! Very well explained and demonstrated Thank you!

  • @Dave5843-d9m
    @Dave5843-d9m Год назад +3

    I rebuilt a brake with silicone lubricant spray and ruined it. The piston came out nicely but had no slip-back. The seal was sliding too easily so the brake wasn’t releasing. I had to replace the piston bug using just brake fluid and red rubbed grease was the correct way to go.

  • @ThunderbirdRocket
    @ThunderbirdRocket 7 месяцев назад

    Extraordinary detail !
    Super helpful !!
    I learned lots !!!
    Thanks mate .
    👊🏼 🔥 🧰

  • @frankhoward7645
    @frankhoward7645 Год назад

    4:40. I ALWAYS apply anti-seize to the bleeder screw threads for obvious reasons. Had too many break off!

  • @JDye-youtube
    @JDye-youtube 10 месяцев назад

    I use an instant read thermometer to initially determine if I have a dragging brake. After driving, touch an instant read thermometer to opposing disks and see what the temps are. One that’s dragging will be much hotter. A shimmy in the front wheels while driving down the road will often indicate a dragging brake also.

  • @jamalknowles5683
    @jamalknowles5683 Год назад

    Nice video thanks for this. This truck seen better days.

  • @mateckz
    @mateckz 3 месяца назад

    where did you get that tool to press the piston for the caliper back in? those look neat.

  • @carolinawestern3875
    @carolinawestern3875 8 месяцев назад

    Had the same issue (front left) but fully released it by opening the line. Replacing the master cyl. cured it. But don't know how it could make only one caliper drag. 2 days later an identical year, make, model truck had the same problem and cure. 2006 Chevy HD2500

  • @fredbergeron2193
    @fredbergeron2193 Год назад

    underated channel bro i live in northen quebec my shit cant last.... great video straight to the f point

  • @sheba6779
    @sheba6779 Год назад +1

    Hi great video 👍🏼. I have a 2008 Honda Civic 1.8l and I’m having issues with the calibers sticking. I installed new calibers, slider pins, rotors, brake pads and both front brake line hoses. I’m still getting sticky calibers causing the rotors to get hot while driving. I did a complete brake flush to make sure there’s no air in the lines and filled the brake fluid reservoir to the correct full level but can not seem to find the problem. There’s no leaks around the master cylinder, no ABS or break lights on and the brake lines look good. Brake fluid runs through the front and back brake lines properly. I’m stuck on this one. If you or anyone have any ideas on what my issue is can you please let me know. No codes Thank you.

    • @Neil555-11
      @Neil555-11 Год назад

      One thing I learned recently is you should use silicone for the guide/slide pins, and additionally make sure there is no grease/silicone down at the bottom otherwise it will make pressure and push the pin back out. FYI

    • @otofoto
      @otofoto Год назад

      Piston is retracted by piston O-ring. It slightly twists when force is applied and when untwisting it pushes piston slightly back and prevents brake drag. Worn O-ring doesn't work so well as has rounded edges.
      So everything should be smooth. You should be able to push piston back by hand(use a handle). Also brake pads should slide easy.

  • @otofoto
    @otofoto Год назад

    Piston is retracted by piston O-ring. It slightly twists when force is applied and when untwisting it pushes piston slightly back and prevents brake drag. Worn O-ring doesn't work so well as has rounded edges.
    So everything should be smooth. You should be able to push piston back by hand(use a handle) without need for special tool. If special tool is needed O-ring or piston is bad.

  • @tomkoolman
    @tomkoolman Год назад +11

    Very informative video, good job. But for me, I would replace it with a new one instead.

  • @stevejones1318
    @stevejones1318 2 месяца назад

    What if the manufacturer no longer supplies seals? My 1976 Gold Wing for example. What do I ask for at an engineering supply company?

  • @kestutissimkus7088
    @kestutissimkus7088 Год назад

    Great job great video!short and simple video !!!! Every word that came of mans mouth was worth 100$

  • @alanhayward6719
    @alanhayward6719 2 месяца назад

    Outstanding helpful video, many thanks!

  • @bsdguy
    @bsdguy 9 месяцев назад

    Is there one size for cars for the rebuild kit? I notice you had a Honda. I had a similar issue with a Lincoln. Thx

    • @danielross971
      @danielross971 11 дней назад

      The kits for my car are $20 per caliper :(
      I haven't bought one yet, and I'm considering just measuring the sizes I'd need and looking for generic ones.

  • @adsosa2414
    @adsosa2414 2 года назад +11

    Why didn't you replace the rotors?! They were shot!
    Otherwise, nice to see how to rebuild the caliper. Thanks.

    • @poolpoolification
      @poolpoolification Год назад +1

      he seems to think they are fine - crazy

    • @livestock9722
      @livestock9722 Год назад

      @@poolpoolification They worked, didn't they? Really only a safety issue when they warp, mind you not a good idea to wait that long...

    • @poolpoolification
      @poolpoolification Год назад

      @@livestock9722 either you have brakes or the pedal goes too low due to pads gone or no brake fluid

    • @JakeStewart1343
      @JakeStewart1343 Год назад

      He doesn't replace, he rebuilds 😂

    • @fakeaccount8342
      @fakeaccount8342 Год назад

      If there's no pulsation or vibration you can just sand them a bit by hand to remove most of that shit and it'll be fine.

  • @chaunceylocklear3661
    @chaunceylocklear3661 Год назад

    well done. Nice editing to make it concise.

  • @MichaelJeffers75
    @MichaelJeffers75 7 месяцев назад

    How do I track down a seal kit? I'd like to rebuild my Power Stop S4690 rear calipers on my F250. 44.45mm Piston Diameter

  • @michaelrostine1315
    @michaelrostine1315 Год назад

    I have always had problems with sticking brakes on the passenger side front wheels .
    I have drove some beaters (beaders) but most had low miles .
    I am hard on brakes .
    On my Dodge diesel I am on a second new set caliper and the b**** just started sticking again after 5000 miles ,I changed U joints ,bearing, roaters, brakes, and calipers this last go round.
    Brake hoses?

  • @SimRacingVeteran
    @SimRacingVeteran Год назад +1

    What kind of caliber is that calliper?

  • @dzmitry21
    @dzmitry21 3 месяца назад

    Very well explained, thank you!

  • @helpfulhippo3744
    @helpfulhippo3744 Год назад +4

    Here is how I quickly diagnose and then repair:
    1. Large difference in thickness of inner and outer pad = Slide pin issues = SERVICE SLIDE PINS BOTH SIDES, make sure slide pin boots are not cracked or torn.
    2. Even pads in caliper but difference in thickness side to side = sticking caliper, or unlikely brake hose issue = REPLACE BOTH CALIPERS ( not worth the time to service, calipers are generally cheap and 1 hour trying to remove, resurface pucks, replace seals, and very likely service a broken bleeder = waste of time ) NOW... IF BRAKE FLUID WAS CHANGED EVERY TIME BRAKES WERE SERVICED, I DOUBT THIS WOULD EVEN BE NEEDED.
    3. Rotors look like these = REPLACE THEM !!! It's not worth having an accident because your braking is diminished by rotors not making full contact with the pads...
    My rule of thumb, replace rotors every 2nd pad change, flush fluid ( most cars can gravity bleed ) every pad change to keep your calipers from getting sticky. By doing this you keep moisture out of your parts and ABS systems can be expensive to repair... A can of brake fluid is about 6- and if you do it every time you service front or rear brakes you likely will not have bleeder issues either...
    My 2cents.... Having an accident because your brakes aren't working 100% is a bad bargain, for likely $150- per axle and an hour or two of your time could save you thousands in accident damage and prevent you from hurting yourself or your family.... Driving a car with these rotors, and pads worn to the metal before repair seems to me to be irrresponsible....

  • @ThomasNappo
    @ThomasNappo 8 месяцев назад +1

    Great detailed video..😊

  • @donovanhenry6613
    @donovanhenry6613 8 месяцев назад +8

    My brother in Christ, you are driving on iron dust and prayers. Replace everything as soon as possible

    • @melodyyoung9640
      @melodyyoung9640 Месяц назад +1

      This is normal in some places, replaced parts would be rusty in a couple of years anyway

  • @PenntuckytheCrag
    @PenntuckytheCrag 3 месяца назад

    Great lay out of info. Good job

  • @Faced1111
    @Faced1111 3 месяца назад

    Random question for ya, what if the piston is way too loose after letting off the brake pedal?

  • @JAndrioli
    @JAndrioli Год назад

    ive owned a pilot just as crusty or more. im so happy i dont have it anymore. this is a problem that kept coming back every year. how many hours of my life i wasted on those brakes... arffff
    in my experience the grease does not help. It only contaminated the pads when it rained. Also the guide/slide pins get stuck when the inner rubber seal (yes inside) swole up. Get rid of it. I used a sandblaster to clean the calipers when I rebuilt mine.

  • @pablomartinez1494
    @pablomartinez1494 5 месяцев назад

    What about if I change the calipers and their continuous getting stuck???

  • @MIchaelWIlliams-ix4ys
    @MIchaelWIlliams-ix4ys Год назад

    Thanks for the video , well done for taking the time.

  • @andrewivanowich8390
    @andrewivanowich8390 Год назад +5

    With what parts stores want for new or reman calipers you are saving someone alot of money.

  • @ShooterQ
    @ShooterQ 6 месяцев назад

    More good info in five minutes than most mechanics will give you in a lifetime.

  • @ILoveChanelLynn
    @ILoveChanelLynn Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for your video! Helped me complete my brake pad job! You are Awesome! 🫡👏🙌

  • @_the_hammer_
    @_the_hammer_ 2 дня назад

    DID YOU GET THIS VEHICLE OUT OF THE JUNK YARD ?

  • @JLange642
    @JLange642 7 месяцев назад

    Yes- I agree this is a great video on how to diagnose and repair, but I also would have just put a new caliper on that due to it's condition. (That one set of pad were wasted to the bare metal!) Still, good to see how to do it IF you chose to.

  • @b_gumm
    @b_gumm 6 месяцев назад

    Award winner for best edited video I've ever watched

  • @harleyrider4949
    @harleyrider4949 5 месяцев назад

    So took the caliper off and wheel still doesn't spin - 08 Tundra 4x4 - wheel gets super hot - other side is fine wheel spins and wheel not hot so any ideas - new caliper or

    • @HighDollar17
      @HighDollar17 4 месяца назад

      Probably your wheel bearing

    • @paperballotsonly
      @paperballotsonly 4 месяца назад

      Got 2 new calipers from Amazon $47.00 for both delievered next day- installed one and wheel is nice and cold - have one for a spare- the old caliper has a stuck piston as you diagnosed as the problem

    • @HighDollar17
      @HighDollar17 4 месяца назад

      @@paperballotsonly who are you even replying to? You commented on someone else's comment

  • @Matt-w7p
    @Matt-w7p 3 месяца назад

    Great video, no messing

  • @XhibitOneProductions
    @XhibitOneProductions Год назад +2

    yoooo....that's A LOT of rust on that rotor, especially those brake pads that's as a Hot N' Ready cardboard pizza. 😂 Nontheless, thank you for sharing this video with us!

  • @donalconway
    @donalconway Год назад

    Would you not get a wire brush or something to give the calipers a good clean while youre at it!