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Part Details
Product Features
TRQ brake pads are manufactured using premium raw materials and design standards to restore original performance. TRQ brake pads are positive molded and utilize a multi-layer shim for enhanced performance and service life. TRQ’s combination of materials and design ensures a low dust and low noise braking experience. TRQ recommends replacing your brake rotors when you replace your brake pads to ensure even wear of components and improved braking comfort. All products are fit and road-tested in our Massachusetts R&D facility to ensure we deliver on our promise of Trusted Reliable Quality.
Item Condition:
New
Attention California Customers:
WARNING: This product can expose you to chemicals including Lead and Lead Compounds, which are known to the State of California to cause cancer, and birth defects or other reproductive harm. For more information, go to www.P65Warnings.ca.gov.
Lifetime Warranty
This item is backed by our limited lifetime warranty. In the event that this item should fail due to manufacturing defects during intended use, we will replace the part free of charge. This warranty covers the cost of the part only.
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Hi, I'm Mike from 1A Auto. We've been selling auto parts for over 30 years.
Hey, everyone. Sue here from 1A Auto and today I am working on a 2010 Nissan Murano. We're going to be doing rear brakes. If you need these parts or any other parts for your car, click on the link below and head on over to 1AAuto.com.
You want to take the wheel off. I've got a 21 millimeter socket, vehicle supported, just a light weight on the tire. I've got a wheel lock key, I'm going to line it up. Loosen up the lug nuts.
Now I'm going to lift the car up and I'll take the rest of the lug nuts off. You can use a jack and jack stand at home. Now the vehicle's up in the air, I can take the five lug nuts off. Now we can take the tire off. Take the leader screw boot right off. Set that aside. Let's break the leader screw open, make sure it opens freely. Oh yeah, perfect. I'm just going to lightly snug it. I got a catch pan down here, so it will drip run into there.
Now we can take the caliper off the caliper bracket. Fourteen millimeter wrench and I'm going to break free the caliper to bracket slider bolt. We can see the inside pin moving freely and that's good. I'm going to break free the top one first before I take that pin out.
Now we can take both of these slider bolts out. You can't take the bottom one out, it hits that radius arm. I'm going to have to take the bracket off of the knuckle.
The bracket to the knuckle is 19 millimeter socket or wrench. There is 0.0 room even for a socket, let alone a socket with a ratchet. I have to put a wrench on there and unethically take a rubber mallet and hit that wrench to break this bolt free. The torque is 62 foot-pounds. There we go. I got that one free. I'm going to free up the top one.
Now we can pull the caliper bracket off, get that slider pin out. Let's take the bracket right out. There's our caliper bracket with the pads. While I'm here, I'm going to install my piston tool so I can push this piston back.
First thing I'm going to do, is open that bleeder screw and aim it at my catch pan. My catch pan. Make sure it's in good working order going. Nice clean fluid and this piston is going back real smooth. There's no drag. We'll examine the caliper boot after. Make sure there's no pin holes, no damage to the seal. Bottom that out, and just tighten up the bleeder screw.
Now what I'm going to look for is any fluid coming out of the dust boot, and I don't see any leakage. We're in good shape with this. I'm just going to put the caliper up there, make sure it doesn't hang and stretch off the flex hose.
Let's take the rotor off. We're going to take a look at the emergency brake shoes. Let's see. In pretty good shape here. Got plenty check for any loose bonding. You just grab the shoe itself, pull back and forth. The bonding is the glue that adheres the shoe to the actual metal bracket and it's very common for it to come undone. Looks good, so now we can move on.
Here we have our new rotor and pads from 1A Auto and we chose to put the performance rotors, because it is an option on this model. We could get the solid rotors or the performance and we went with the performance. The reason for that is they are a higher grade rotor. They come slotted for the cooling and they are thinned. The thins are straight on, not curved. They are milled, that's a balanced rotor right there and the rotor is zinc coated, so they cut down on the rust, which would cause pulsation and they last longer. It's got a machined inside hub for the actual e-brakes. Pads are slotted for cooling and have the shaved edges for the dust distributing. Come with shims riveted on, so if you need this part, or any other part for your car, click on the link below and head on over to 1AAuto.com.
I'm going to take a wire brush and just clean up my hub. Looks pretty good, there's no rust buildup. I just want to make sure that I can clean it quickly and then I can clean it down, spray it down with some brake clean. Just to make sure there's nothing there. You want a smooth surface against your hub to reassure no break pulsation.
Now we'll clean the shoes also. There's always going to be brake dust. We'll just get rid of the residual part of it. Let that dry. We're just going to clean these real quick with some break parts clean, just to get any little metal particles off. I got some high temp copper spray. Stop some rust buildup.
Install my new rotor and we can see that they're slotted right here and that is for e-brake adjustment. Don't forget to change your rubber boot from the old rotor over to the new one.
I just take a flat-head screwdriver, you can just poke it right in there and pull that right out. Make sure it's not torn and it's going to work, fit in the new one. You don't want any water getting in there.
What I like to do is also check the adjustment on the e-break and that's what that window for, that little cut out window. I'll show you the adjuster. Here's the adjuster right here. We're going to end up taking a flat-head screwdriver going through the window and turning the adjuster to push the shoes out or bring them in if I want to drag. A little difficult on an all-wheel drive vehicle, because the differential already has a good drag on it.
I'm going to put a lug nut on to make sure my rotor stays flush. I'll put one more on the other side, opposite. Try to keep it as flush to the hub as possible.
Now I can just take a small flat-head screwdriver and I can go right into that window, feel the adjuster, there it is, and I can move the adjuster and feel the drag. When I'm happy with the adjustment, I'll just take my rubber boot, reline it up, same flat screwdriver, I'll jut pop that little edge right in. It's done.
Now we're going to clean the caliper. First thing I'm going to do is remove both slider boots and I'm going to examine the boots for any tears, punctured holes, worn, they're not worn. Same to the other boot, you want to do it to both of them, examine. Now I'm going to take the tins off. If you've got new tins, I say, "Bravo." I prefer to use new tins every time. It's just pennies on the dollar. But I'm going to show you if you didn't get tins, how to clean the bracket and the tins up.
I'm carefully prying these off so that I don't manipulate them and bend them because I have to reuse them. Look at all that rust coming off. That is what I'm trying to show you here. Important part of a break job is cleaning, cleaning, cleaning. It's not just throwing pads on. There's a reason for it.
All this rust buildup under here pushes the pads up and freezes them in the bracket, so when the caliper squeezes, the pad does not move freely in and out, it doesn't slide. Then you have premature wear on your pads and break pulsations. Calipers will end up malfunctioning. It's a heavy expense for truly what is just time. That's all this is, is time.
I'm going to take a wire brush to this whole thing. If you've got a wire wheel, brush on a wheel, you can try to see if you can get it to fit in there. I don't, so I'm going to use my little wire brush. You do this to both sides, everything I'm going to do you're going to do to all sides of the brakes.
Next, I'm going to take a wire brush that I connect to a drill and they call this horning out the port in here. I'm going to take all the rust out, because the slider bolt slides in here and I want it to be smooth. Do it to both sides.
I'm also going to suggest you strongly clean around where that boot goes, because if that boot doesn't sit tightly on this lip that is designed for it, water will get in there and water and calipers do not mix. Not the sliding part at least. In here we have the caliper sliding pin, bolt pin, whatever you want to call it and this one is a rubber tip on the end.
I have found in my years that the rubber tip caliper slider pin will always go on the top of the mounting. Once this is mounted it's actually mounted this way, so it'll go in on this part. I would love to answer any questions if you say, Why? But I can't, so I'm not going to lie to you. It's just the way it is. I've taken a million brakes apart from calipers for manufacturers and they always are on the top. Maybe someday I'll find someone I can ask, but just in case if you're questioning it, that's where it goes.
Look at the rust here. This is severe. These we had a hard time taking out and I could tell you I've already done the other side and I had to hammer the pins out of the caliber bracket, so that's not what you want. After this break job, hopefully it will not be that way. I'm actually going to go to my wire wheel and use it on these threads and get that seat right there all nice and clean in here.
Now I'm going to clean the actual caliper tins. I'm going to rest it on the steel here and I'm just going to stop, the most important part is the bottom part believe it or not. I don't want any rust on the bottom. There's going to be silicone paste on the bottom, or caliper grease, whichever one you want to use. That's just the dust shield.
Now we're going to clean the inside here where the pad rides. The difference. Do the same to the other tin. I'm going to clean this caliper all up, try to get all the dust out. Alright just going to let that dry.
Now I'm going to use the high proof waterproof silicone paste and just coat the bottom part of the caliper where the tins sit. I just want to keep the water and rust from building up. I'll snap the tins right down in there. The high side goes to the back of the caliper. Here we go. Same to the other side and then you do not apply silicone or caliper grease to the top of the sliders where the pads sit. You want that surface to be nice and just clean of any residue.
Now I'm going to take a small screwdriver and I'm going to open up this boot and I'm going to put some silicone paste inside. I want it to get in all the grooves, so it keeps the actual pin lubricated as it goes through the years. And plus it keeps the rubber from dry rotting and breaking. Okay, that's ready now.
Now I'm going to put a little silicone paste inside, actually I'll put it on the pins. Okay, let's put the boots on. You'll see the wide end, the rubber has a narrow and wide lip. The wide piece goes on this and locks around. Make sure it's seated and it's locked right in. Perfect.
Now I'm going to set my pads up inside the bracket. The one with the indicator goes on the inside, that's closest to the actual knuckle. We're going to line it up. I like to lay it flat like that into the tip clips and then just slide it right in. Same with this side. I just lay it down flat, stand it up. Sometimes it works, it slides right in. There we go. Now that's all ready to go.
The way this Nissan's designed, I can't just mount this on and put the actual caliper over the pins in. The bottom pin there's a radius arm there that hits, so I have to actually mount this on the caliper and then mount the caliper on the rotor.
I know that it goes like that, so I'm going to find my caliper, set it up, guide it in. The pads are going to want to fall out, so this makes it a little difficult. Let's try it without. It's really not the easiest thing. The slider without the rubber boot goes on the bottom. Let's see if we can get that started. Yeah, that's all I want to do is get the top one started.
Let's see if we can slide the pads actually in now. Okay, inner pad. There we go. And then the outer pad. Whole time I've got pressure on those caliper sliders so that it doesn't push the pad out.
Now we can line that up. Put the top bolt in. That's a 19 millimeter wrench. Let's see if we can get those started. The torque specs for the caliper bolt bracket to knuckle is 62 foot-pounds. Now I've set up my 3/8 ratchet with 62 foot-pounds and I'm going to show you why you can't torque it. The radius arm right here is in the way. You cannot get in there. You can do the top. For the bottom, I'm going to have to use a wrench. There's a bottom nut. I want a little security, take a rubber mallet, give it a quarter of a turn.
Now I can tighten down the caliper sliders 14 millimeter, keeping an eye on that boot. I want that boot to make sure it seats properly. I know I got enough silicone in there, keep it nice and moist and not dry. I don't want it to be sitting back here. There's a little lip on that. I don't want it off the lip. I want it on that lip of that slider pin. Make sure they're both on there. Cool. The torque on that is 32 foot-pounds. I'm going to get a 13 millimeter socket and see if I can tighten that to the manufacturer specs.
Looks like I'm going to be able to get the top, but I don't think I'm going to get in here. Nope. They're really help themselves along putting that arm so close, huh? I'm just going to give this a nice little, it's only 32 foot-pounds, so that's good.
Now we can open that bleeder screw and let it gravity bleed. Make sure you put your catch pat underneath. A lot of air bubbles going out of this one. I got a nice steady stream now, so I'm just going to snug that up, close it off. Clean that up, put the boot back on. Here we go.
Now we can come up to the master cylinder and top it off. Look at the cover, it'll tell us type of fluid. This says .3 brake fluid, so I'm going to take the cover off, make sure I try not to get any dirt in there. You want it as clean as possible. I'm going to bring the level up to where it needs to be. I can replace the cover, make sure it locks down.
Now we can put the tire back on. Make sure you put the rim flush against the hub. I'm going to snug this lock lug nut flush, so I can let go of the tire. 2010 Murano, the wheel torque is 80 foot-pounds. I'm going to start in a star pattern, 21 millimeter socket, I'm going to go right to the bottom. One, torque it and do star pattern all the way around. I'm going to do it twice, because I like to make sure. Ready to go.
Thanks for watching. Visit us at 1AAuto.com for quality auto parts, fast and free shipping, and the best customer service in the industry.
Tools used
We're going to take these lug nuts off. Use a 21-millimeter socket, and remove the wheel. These two bolts out, use a 14-millimeter wrench. That one's stuck.
I'm going to take this lower caliper bolt off. I'm going to use a 14-millimeter socket. I'm not going to take the top one off because the brake hose is in the way, so I'm just going to have to tip this caliper up and slide that out.
I'm just going to use a straight-blade screwdriver, just compress the caliper. Just compress the caliper a little bit, and then just slide it up and off like that. And you can work it back and forth. This one's a little bit seized in here, so I'm going to have to clean that up, but normally, it should just slide right off. And slide it right off like that. Take a right brake caliper hanger and just hang it up. Make sure there's no tension on the brake hose.
We'll take the brake pads off. You can use a screwdriver and pry them out. We're going to take this caliper bracket off, take these two bolts off. We're going to use a 17-millimeter socket. Take those bolts out, and just slide the caliper bracket right off.
Now, we're going to take the brake rotor off. Just take a hammer. I'm going to hit it right here, here, in those areas. Just be careful not to hit the studs. Give it a tap, slide it off. And just take a wire brush, clean up some of this rust. If anything's built up, make sure you get that off. That's all cleaned up. Just use a little bit of copper anti-seize, just a nice thin coat, so the rotor doesn't get stuck on.
All right, take the rotor. We're just going to install it backwards. Take some brake parts cleaner, clean this off. Use a rag. There is a coating on the brakes themselves, on the rotor. Flip it around. Do the same on this side and wipe it down.
On the old rotor, there's a little plug right here. Just take a pocket screwdriver, pull that out. Just install that in the new one. Just line it up. We're good to go.
Just take this anti-rattle clip off, or pad slide clip, and just use a pocket screwdriver, slide this off. Take a wire brush, just clean up this area. Take a little brake caliper grease right there and right there. Take the new anti-rattle clip, slide it in place. Do the same on the other side.
And just take a little brake parts cleaner. Just clean out the...where the brake caliper pins go. And use a rag to clean that out. And also, the pins themselves, a little brake parts cleaner, clean it up. And you can use a little bit of brake caliper grease on these. And we'll reinstall these when we put the caliper back on.
Just take a little more brake caliper grease, put it on the slides, right there and right there. Slide the bracket over the rotor. Take the two bolts, get those started, and torque those bolts to 62 foot-pounds.
Take the brake pads. The inside brake pad is going to have the one with the wear indicator at the base of the pad, just like this. And the outside one with no indicator, slide that in position.
Take the brake caliper off the hanger, and you want to use a brake caliper compressing tool. I'm just going to take an old brake pad, slide it in here, and compress the brake pad. That's going to push the piston back, push the fluid through the hoses and lines, back up into the master cylinder. Just do it nice and slow.
And just some brake caliper grease on this slide pin, and that's good. Slide that back in. Make sure that seals up there. And take the other slide pin and bolt, and slide that back in. And torque that bolt to 32 foot-pounds. If you took that top bolt out, torque that one as well. We didn't take it out, so we're good.
Reinstall the wheel. Put the lug nuts on. Now I'm going to torque the lug nuts to 83 foot-pounds in a star pattern to tighten the wheel down evenly.
And I'll just go around again, double check. And pump the brake pedal nice and slow. There's going to be an air gap between the brake caliper piston and the brake pads. And then, check the brake fluid level and adjust accordingly.
Tools used
Hi, I'm Mike from 1AAuto. We've been selling auto parts for over 30 years! We're dedicated to delivering quality auto parts, expert customer service, and fast and free shipping, all backed by our 100% satisfaction guarantee. So visit us at 1AAuto.com, your trusted source for quality auto parts.
In this video, we're going to be working with our 2009 Nissan Rogue all-wheel drive. We're going to show you how to remove and replace your vehicle's rear brake pads and rotors.
If you like this video, please click Subscribe. We have a ton more information on this and many other vehicles. If you need these parts for your car, you can follow the link down in the description over to 1aauto.com.
Here are the items you'll need for this repair: 14-21mm socket, ratchet, breaker bar, wire brush, brake grease, brake cleaner, groove jaw pliers, torque wrench, jack and jack stands
Loosen your lug nuts with a 21 millimeter socket and a breaker bar. You want to loosen them all about one turn. Raise and support your vehicle. We're using a lift to make it easier to show you what's going on, but this job can easily be done at home with a jack and jack stands.
Now, normally you can remove lug nuts by hand, but these are recessed pretty far into the wheel, so I'm just going to use the 21 millimeter socket and my hand to remove the rest of our lug nuts. Remove your wheel and tire.
Remove the two 14 millimeter caliper bolts with a 14 millimeter socket and ratchet. Make sure you crack them both loose before removing either one fully. Now this pin is pretty stuck in the caliper bracket. You'll want to use some wrenches that are smaller than the flange of the bolt but bigger than the shank of the bolt. Use those to get over it and pry it out while you turn it to help wedge it and force it out of the caliper. Now you'll see I'm using two wrenches to bridge this gap, so you kind of pry them out as far as you can, and if you reach a point where you can't go any further, add another wrench.
Now, normally we would use a bungee cord to secure these, but this caliper isn't very heavy and I have a nice flat control arm back here where we can just rest it out of the way. Loosen the caliper bracket bolts with a 17 millimeter socket. Ours are pretty rusted, so we're using a breaker bar. You may just be able to use a ratchet. Again, be sure to break both loose before removing either one fully. Our brake pad fell out. That's fine. We're going to be replacing them anyway. Remove your caliper bracket from the vehicle. Remove your brake rotor.
Here we have our old brake parts that we removed from our vehicle and our new parts from 1AAuto.com. As you can see these parts are exactly the same. We have the same dimensions on the rotor. This small hole here is an access for your e-brake adjuster so you can adjust that up. However, there should be a rubber plug here that's missing on our part. Our brake pads actually aren't that bad. The reason we're replacing these brakes is due to the heavy corrosion and rust build-up on the rotors. This is caused from partially from the vehicle sitting.
The other portion of this issue is: you can tell by the wear on the brakes that this vehicle has had just brake pads put on it without having the rotor machined which is fairly uncommon, or a new rotor installed. Of course we always recommend you do pads and rotors as a set. So if your old brakes are rusted and corroded, or the backing on your brakes is worn down, these new parts from 1A Auto will go in direct fit, just like your original equipment, and fix you up right.
Remove your brake hardware. Use a screwdriver if necessary, but these pop off pretty well by hand. Use a wire brush to clean all the rust and debris build-up where your brake hardware sits in the bracket. You don't have to go crazy with this. It's not going to be perfectly smooth, but you do want to get the majority of the heavy build-up off of there. We'll then take our hardware which ours really isn't that bad. If yours is really rusted, broken, or doesn't have its spring to it, then you'll need to replace them. But we're just going to clean ours off with a wire brush. Apply a thin coat of brake grease to the caliper bracket where your hardware sits. This will prevent more rust from building up underneath it, as well as helping to hold in those clips a little bit better. Reinstall your hardware.
You'll notice one side is shorter than the other, so make sure it goes together correctly. Make sure this one with the long tab goes on the bottom. We'll apply a thin coat of grease to this as well. You'll notice some coating places that the brake pad does not ride in. But that's just again to help prevent with rust and debris build-up. Using a wire brush clean the rust and debris off the surface of your hub to make sure your rotor sits flat and straight. Ours is pretty bad so as opposed to a wire brush we're going to get an air grinder on here and rip some of that material off. We'll now apply a thin coat of grease to the hub. Again, this is to keep parts from rusting together or rusting at all, so next time we'll just wipe the old grease off and apply a nice new coat, rather than go through all the work and effort of grinding it and cleaning it down again.
Install your rotor onto the hub backwards. Spray down the surface of the rotor with some brake parts cleaner. This will remove any dirt and debris, as well as the oils they use to prevent these parts from rusting while they're being stored. We'll then flip the rotor around and you can see we have this cool kind of star shape to the hub which means the location of your e-brake adjuster hole doesn't matter because it will work in any of the positions, and then we'll spray down the front side too.
Reinstall your brake caliper bracket, as well as the two 17 millimeter bolts. Tighten them down with a 17 millimeter socket and ratchet. Install your brake pads and apply a coat of grease to the back side of the pad where the caliper will contact it. Using a pair of groove jaw pliers carefully and slowly compress your brake caliper piston. Grease your guide pins.
Reinstall your brake caliper over the pads. Make sure that you get your boots lined up and start your pins. We'll then tighten down our pins with a 14 millimeter socket and ratchet.
Now normally you would want to reinstall the rubber cover for your e-brake adjuster, but ours is missing so we'll reinstall the wheel and tire. I'll get one nut started on there, we'll get the rest on as best we can and then tighten them down by hand with our 21 millimeter socket. We'll then torque our lug nuts to 80 foot-pounds in a cross pattern.
Thanks for watching. Visit us at 1AAuto.com for quality auto parts, fast and free shipping, and the best customer service in the industry.
Tools used
Brought to you by 1AAuto.com. Your source for quality replacement parts and the best service on the internet. Hi, I'm Don from 1A Auto. I hope this how to video help you out. The next time you need a part for your vehicle think of 1AAuto.com. Thanks. In this video we show you how to replace the rear brakes on this 2003 Nissan Altima, pretty much the same for any 2002 to 2006. We show you the right hand, the left hand is the same procedure. We do always recommend you replace your brakes in pairs.
The items you'll need for this repair are new brakes pads and rotor kit from 1A Auto.com; 8, 12, 14, 19 and 21 mm sockets with a ratchet. A piece of pipe for some extra leverage. Brake cleaner, brake grease, brake fluid, jack and jack stands and a torque wrench. Raise and remove your wheel and tire. If you don't have the benefit of air tools, loosen the lug nuts with the vehicle on the ground, then raise and support it and remove the lug nuts the rest of the way. Inspect your brakes. You can look through and see the brake pads, and there's not much left to the brake pads on this vehicle and the rotor is in rough shape, pretty corroded with some large gouges. To just replace the pads you can see we took that top bolt out, but we're going to take the whole rotor off because it's actually frozen on this car.
Its two 19 mm bolts and you can see we use a 19 mm socket with a ratchet and a pipe for some extra leverage. You'll need to do this if you want to replace the rotor anyways, because you need to take the whole caliper bracket off in order to get the rotor off. Once the bolts are removed, using a flat blade screwdriver pry that off. Then you can set that aside. Your old rotor pulls right off. You want to use a flat blade screwdriver and pop this plug out of the rotor. Spray down your emergency brake assembly with some brake cleaner. Now using brake cleaner wipe down your new rotor. Then you put some brake grease on either end of your brake pads. You can see here's your adjuster for your other brake and that hole in the rotor is so you can reach the adjuster with a screwdriver. Turn it until you feel the parking brake drag on the inside a little bit; once adjusted then you can replace the plug. As we said before, our caliper was in bad shape. We ended up having to replace it, but you can ad lib along with us. You can put your caliper back in place.
Take the pads out of your caliper, and then put the caliper back in place. Put the two 19 mm bolts in place and then tighten them up to 85 - 90 foot pounds. Now you want to remove this 14 mm bolt right here. Once the bolt's removed pull your caliper back and then push, your brake pad slides into place. Once the sides are in place you can put your brake pads back in and push your caliper back into place and replace that 14mm bolt. Fast forward as we tighten that bolt back up to 25 foot pounds. - to your brake lines. Now we're going to fast forward here as Don replaces the wheel. You want to put the lug nuts on preliminarily. Lower the vehicle and tighten them the rest of the way. Now torque the lug nuts to a 100 foot pounds in a crossing pattern. After doing any repair on the brakes, before taking it out onto the road it's important to do a couple of things first. First you want to pump the brakes until the brake pedal firms up. Then you want to do a stop test from five miles per hour and then 10 miles per hour.
We hope this video helps you out; brought to you by 1AAuto.com. Your source for quality replacement parts and the best service on the internet. Please feel free to call us toll free 888-844-3393. We're the company that's here for you on the internet and in person.
Tools used
Remove the hubcap. Use a pry bar or a pry tool. Use a 21-millimeter socket to take the lug nuts off and remove the wheel. Remove this lower bolt on the caliper, attaching it to the bracket. This bolts because of the brake hose. We're gonna leave that one in. Use a 14-millimeter socket. Take that out. Just rotate the caliper up and slide it off. Leave that pin attached to the caliper.
Take the brake caliper. Find a position where the hose is not being stretched. Lay the caliper down or use a brake caliper hanger. Take the brake pads off. Just use a screwdriver, or sometimes they slide right off. These are rusted in there. Take these two caliper bracket bolts out. Use a 17-millimeter socket. And slide the bracket off. Take this little plug off the rotor. Use a pick or a screwdriver. Save that, you're gonna use that on the other rotor. And take the rotor off, just use a hammer if it's stuck on there. Hitting these locations. Just be careful, don't hit the studs. And slide it off.
Clean up some of the hub surface to get some of that rust off. Either use a wire brush or a sanding disc. Just take some brake parts cleaner, clean that up. You can put a thin coat of anti-seize on the hub surface. It looks good. Take the rotor, just install it backwards first. Take a little brake parts cleaner, clean the backside of the rotor. Wipe it down with a rag. And flip the rotor over. It looks good. Now clean this side and wipe it down.
If you have to adjust the parking brake, the adjuster is down here. Install the plug. That's another way you can adjust the parking brake in that area. You can take that off and use a screwdriver. Now, take the pad hardware off. Just use a pick or a screwdriver. Take a wire brush, remove some of this rust. Use a little brake clean. And wipe it down.
Take a little brake grease. Take the brake hardware and line it up. And then do the same for the other side. Now, take the brake caliper guide pin or the caliper bolt. Clean that up. Use a little brake parts cleaner. If it's really bad, you can use a wire brush on it to clean some of that up, clean some of the rust off. And do the same, the one that's attached to the caliper. And because this was fairly rusty, I'm gonna clean these caliper guide holes out.
Then you can use a rag, clean that out, do the same on this side. And take some brake caliper grease and grease the slide up or the pin up. Just take a thin coat of brake caliper grease, just put it on the slides. Do the same on the other side. And take the bracket, slide it over the rotor. Take those bolts. Get those started. And torque those bolts to 62-foot pounds.
Now, take the brake pads. The one with the warning indicator is gonna go on the inside and the indicator is gonna be towards the bottom. Slide that in position and then the other one on the outboard side. And take that brake caliper and use a caliper compressor tool. Compress the caliper, just do it nice and slow. Use some brake caliper lube on that. I'm gonna pin right there.
Now, take the brake caliper and slide that pin into the bracket. Make sure that seals. And slide it down. Take the other pin and just slide it in position. And torque this bolt to 32-foot pounds. And if you loosened up this top one, torque that one as well. And put the wheel back on and the lug nuts.
Now, torque the lug nuts to 80-foot pounds in a star pattern to tighten the wheel down evenly. Just go around again, double-check. And line the hubcap up in the valve stem, reinstall the hubcap. Make sure you pump the brake pedal nice and slow, and double-check your brake fluid level.
Tools used
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