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Part Details
TRQ brake kits are designed to restore your brake system to like-new performance. TRQ brake pads are positive molded, thermal scorched, chamfered, and utilize a multi-layer shim for enhanced performance and service life. TRQ rotors have a non-directional finish that reduces the break-in period for new rotors as well as reducing vibrations throughout the rotor’s lifecycle. All products are fit and road-tested in our Massachusetts R&D facility to ensure we deliver on our promise of Trusted Reliable Quality.
Product Features
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.
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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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Tools used
Okay, friends, one of the first things we need to do is safely raise and support the vehicle. I like to do it with the suspension hanging. Let's remove all five of our lug nuts and the wheel. Looking at the differential here, you're gonna see your center flex hose. Let's take some brake line pinchers and go ahead and pinch this off. For our next step, we're gonna need a nice collection bucket. Put that down on the ground underneath this area right here. This is where your banjo bolt is, and there's gonna be fluid that comes out of this. Just break that free. Now I'm just gonna make it just a little snug so it's bottomed out. Let's continue on by removing these 10-millimeter headed bolts. Grab your caliper, go ahead and take it off. At this point, let's go ahead and remove this banjo bolt completely. Let's empty out our caliper. Go ahead and remove our brake pads. Inspect them real quick. Looks great. Awesome. Let's continue on by removing our caliper bracket by removing these two bolts.
Okay, friends, making our way over to the bench, we're gonna prepare our brand new caliper. To do that, I like to take it completely apart. We'll set this aside for now. Small pocket screwdriver. I'm just gonna take off this boot. We're gonna set it aside because we're gonna need it later. Take off your banjo bolt and make sure you don't lose either of your gaskets that are there. Set that aside for later as well. Let's continue on to the sliders. If you grab on the boot and push on the actual slider itself, you should be able to kind of separate the two. We're gonna slide this out a little bit. You wanna add a little bit of lubricant along here and then try to get some lubricant inside the boot area right there. Make sure you get into the very end right here. There's a little lip. That's where the boot's gonna ride and it's gonna help keep moisture out of there. I'm inside that boot, get in there as far as I can. I especially wanna try to get up into the center area here. Now we'll just go ahead and slide this back in. Perfect. Give it a little wiggle back and forth. Make sure the boot's sitting inside its grooves on both sides. Wipe it down. Do the same to the other slider boot.
Now I've got bolt sliders done. Let's continue on with that caliper grease. We're gonna go along this ear, this ear, and along the caliper piston where the pads are gonna ride. Set this aside. Moving on to the bracket, the next thing we need to do is strip off these tins right here. Take a little bit of that caliper grease and you're gonna go along the areas where the tins are supposed to ride. Take that same tin that you took off of there, slide it back on, do the same to the other side. Perfect. Let's grab all of our parts and make our way back over to the vehicle. The next thing you wanna do is clean and prep your bolts. You wanna make sure that you took off any existing thread locker and, of course, put on some brand new red thread locker. After that, take your brand new bracket right here that we just finished lubing up. Put it on there. We're gonna snug up these bolts and then we're gonna torque them to 100 foot-pounds. Now it's gonna be time to reinstall our pads. There's one. There we are.
Make sure the pads move around freely. Now it's gonna be time to get our caliper on there. If you were to look at it, you can see the bottom area's gonna have this little hooky-do. That's gonna sit down on the outer portion of the bracket. Okay. Slide those sliders. Perfect. Take your new caliper slider bolts, start them both in. We'll snug them up and then we'll torque them to 22 foot-pounds. Okay. The next thing we need to look at is our flex hose. You wanna make sure that you don't have either your gaskets on there on either side and you also wanna make sure the area where the gasket's gonna ride is nice and clear and free of any debris. This one looks good. If it wasn't, you can go out and clean it down with some sandpaper or a brush, whatever you need to do to, but make sure it's clean. Now it's gonna be time to take our brand new banjo bolt. Take one of your little copper crush washers there. We're gonna slide it into the flex hose here, put on your other gasket, and then put it right up into the caliper hole there just like this. So now we're just gonna bottom this out and now we'll torque it to 27 Newton-meters. Let's go ahead and get those hose crimpers off of there.
Now the next thing that we wanna do is go ahead and pump up the brake pedal. You want it to get as firm as possible. That's gonna help force the fluid up inside the caliper where the air is, and then we're gonna open this up and we're just gonna kind of let it gravity bleed for a little bit, work out as much air as possible. Now that we have the brake pedal pumped up, let's go ahead and open our bleeder screw. And we're gonna watch as fluid comes out of this. Just give it a minute. So there we go. We've got fluid coming out of this. It looks like it's coming in a pretty good stream. We wanna just make sure we don't see any more air bubbles. Just give this a couple of loving bonks. You can even try to move these flexibles around a little bit. Once you feel as though you have a pretty steady stream of fluid without air, we'll go ahead and close this and then we'll continue with a manual bleed.
Okay, friends. So the next thing that we need to do is check our brake fluid. You wanna make sure that that reservoir is topped off because we need to continue by bleeding this. To do that, it's gonna be easiest having a second person in the vehicle or, of course, you can continue with a single-person procedure. It's just a little bit different. Essentially, with a second person, what you wanna do is have them inside the vehicle and they're gonna slowly pump up the brake pedal. They're gonna give it three nice low pumps and then hold it on the third. Once they do that, they'll stay holding, we're gonna open up this bleeder screw and fluid's gonna come out. So you need to make sure you have your collection bucket. Once the fluid stops coming out, close it, and then ask them to pump it again another three times slowly and do the same procedure until you don't see any more air coming out of the bleeder screw. With that said, let's get started. Go ahead and pump up the brakes, please.
Okay. So I definitely saw air. Let's go ahead and pump them up again. All right. Let's continue on. Go ahead. That was great. So, on that last one, I didn't see any air bubbles come out, so that tells me that I'm gonna try this one last time. If at that point I don't see any air coming out, then I know that it's good. Let's go ahead and pump it one more time, please. All right. So if you happen to see air like I just did, that just lets you know that you got to do it again. Okay. So now going with the assumption that you've finished bleeding this and you have no more air coming from it, let's go ahead and clean down the area. Take your bleeder screw cover. Go ahead and put it on there. So once you have this bled, of course, you'd wanna go back up under the hood and double-check that brake fluid. Make sure it's nice and full. Let's get the wheel back on here, we're gonna snug it up, then we'll get the vehicle back on the ground and torque the wheels to 130 foot-pounds. Torqued.
Tools used
Hey, friends. It's Len down here at 1A Auto. Today I want to show you something. We're going to be doing rear calipers on a 2016 Ram 1500 Big Horn. Going to be a simple job. I want to be the guy that shows you how to do it.
If you need these or any other parts, you can always come down to 1AAuto.com and check us out.
We've got our long breaker bar with our 22 millimeter socket. I'm going to go ahead and break all these free. I'm not going to loosen them up very much. I have most of the weight of the vehicle off the ground. But the tire is still on the ground. I'm turning to the left, counterclockwise. We don't want to go too loose. We don't want this wheel flopping around. You could break a stud. There we are. Now we can lift it up and we continue to remove this wheel.
We've got our last lug nut coming off. I'm going to hold the wheel, put this aside, grab it, carefully bring it down, and roll it aside.
So here we go. We get the wheel off. First thing we're going to want to do is we're going to make sure that we have this ABS cable clear of everything. I'm just going to stick my little pocket screwdriver in between this, pull that out. You can see there's a little hooky thing there. That just holds onto this rubber. We're going to do the same thing coming up. Being careful not to poke ourselves. Or as careful as we can, right?
There we go. Just do this one for good measure. We shouldn't need to but that's okay. There we are. Now we can move this right out of our way so we don't have to worry about messing around near it and possibly giving it a tug, buying ourselves a new ABS sensor. I can show you how to replace that if you want.
Next I'm going to just replace this boot or remove this boot, mainly because I like to keep these things. Yeah, we're getting a new caliper, and yeah, it's probably going to come with this. But maybe you're going to lose one someday and you're going to want it. Keep it in your junk drawer, keep it in your car, keep it.
Next what I'm going to do is I'm going to grab some line pinchers, something like these. Basically what they're going to do is they're just going to pinch the hose, prevent gravity from letting fluid come down. So I'll just put them up and out of my way. Here's where it gets fun. We're going to wear our safety glasses, wear our gloves. Going to pop this free, fluid is going to come out. So we need to make sure we have a collection receptacle, something that we can make sure that we recycle this fluid properly.
I'm just going to pop this free. Turning it left, just like that. I'm going to tighten it back up in a second. So I don't need to go too far. Now I'm going to grab my little pry bar or if you have a screwdriver. I'm going to go in between the caliper and the rotor. I'm going to be very careful because fluids going to come out of here and into my receptacle. I want to make sure it doesn't get in my eyes or my face or my mouth or anybody else's.
I'm just going to push this back a little bit. That should be enough. I'm going to go ahead and tighten this back up. Seems counterintuitive but it's not. Now what I want to do is I want to loosen up these two bolts right here. It's a 21 millimeter head. The reason why I put this back on is so when I'm banging on these, I don't have fluid just shooting out all over the place. Maybe my head's under here, I'm laying on the ground, whatever the case maybe. I don't want any fluid in my face. If it gets in your eyes, make sure you wash it out immediately.
Make sure my ratchets in the off position so I can turn to the left with my 21 millimeter socket. I'm going to remove this bolt, and then I'm going to start it back in a couple threads. Here's what the bolt looks like. So I'm just going to go ahead and put it in a couple more threads, like I said. I'm going to get this back out of my way again. He wants to play games. We'll play.
Going to come down here. Give it a little love tab. Whatever that even means. Okay. I've removed that bolt. This bolt's still in. Now I'm going to go ahead and remove this completely, and then I'm going to remove this and I'm going to drain my caliper into the receptacle bucket. We've got this bolt still in a little bit, keeps it from falling off completely. I'm just going to bonk this back down. I'm going to remove this banjo bolt completely, let the fluid drain as much as I can, and then I'm going to remove this.
So now I'm going to remove the banjo bolt completely turning it to the left. There we are. On the banjo bolt, you'll notice that there's one of these gaskets. There should be another one on the other side of the hose. This one fell into the receptacle already. So I'll put that one down there because it missed its buddy.
Grab my rag. Like I said, I'm wearing gloves. You don't want to get this brake fluid on your hands. It's hydroscopic so it's going to absorb any moisture from your hands and work its way into your bloodstream, which I'm sure in the State of California will cause cancer or some kind of birth defects or something, and I do agree with that.
So here we go. It's pretty clean. All right. We've removed our caliper. So now you could've done this part either on the vehicle or off the vehicle. For this application, I'm doing it off the vehicle. What I'm going to do is I'm going to use a 10 millimeter socket. I'm going to remove this right here and this bolt right here. And these are going to relieve the caliper from the bracket. Then we'll be able to get the pads right out of there. If you're replacing the pads with the calipers, you wouldn't really have to even do this part.
There's one. There's two. Match them up, they're both the exact same. That's nice. And we have two pieces, caliper, the muscle, and the bracket, the part that holds it. Got your pads in here, go ahead and slip these out. Should come out fairly easily hopefully. Let's see. There we are. Got the little ears right here. Those go over this right here, and this one, same. Okay. The same for this one. Just try to pop it right out of there. There we are. We're going to be reusing these pads. Somebody already took a look at them and decided that they were okay to reuse. So that's fine. If we wanted to, we can go ahead and clean all this crud off of here, which would probably be a great idea and see if we can get any of this out of here. This will cause a brake noise.
If we're doing the brake job and we weren't replacing the calipers, we would want to take off these tins and clean up under there. But we're replacing these. So for the purpose of this video, we won't worry about that.
We have our old caliper and our new caliper. This old caliper just came off of a 2016 Ram 1500 Big Horn. And here we have a quality 1A Auto part, comes with the tins, comes with your little crush gaskets here, very important. You want to make sure you replace those. Don't use your old ones. We'll just take a look, see how everything compares. As you can tell, we've got our mounting bolts, that's great. We got the holes where our line goes into, the banjo bolt. We got our bleeder screws, they're in the same area. If you're comparing it and you find your bleeder screw over here, well, you're just probably comparing it to the other side caliper and that's easy. Just go switch them.
We'll turn them. Look about the same that way. This way. We can take a peek inside. Here's the muscle of the brake right here. You step on your brake pedal, forces fluid down through your flex hose, pushes this out, squeezes against your rotor with the pads, and that's how you stop. Single piston. Here we are, single piston as well. So as you can tell, they're both the same part. The only difference is new with a warranty, old trash.
So if you need this or any other quality part, you can always come down to 1AAuto.com and check us out. Thanks.
So we're going to go ahead and finish removing these bolts right here. Remove this last bolt, put it over here with my other one. As you can tell, they're both the exact same. Oh, they're mixed up. No, they're the same. We got our bracket, everything looks beautiful on it. Caliper, looks great. Now we're going to go ahead and put a little bit of lube. So even though this is a new product, it should come already pre-lubed. We always want to check it anyways. Sometimes a little bit more lube than what they decide they want to put in the factory is nice.
As you can tell, it is lubricated. It's just minimally lubricated. So I like to make sure I put in a little extra. Helps keep the moisture out of there and keeps it from getting jammed up on you. These are sliders right here. Essentially if this was still in, we'll assume that I didn't take it out. Just like that. We want this to be able to go like this forever and ever and ever. If it ends up getting water in there and gets rusted up and this can't move, now you're going to get brake pads that are wearing unevenly. They could wear at an angle. They could ear one thicker than the other. Just make sure that you got plenty of lubricate in here basically is what I'm trying to say.
I'm going to go ahead and lift that up. Here we are. You can use whatever you got for brake lubricant. If you've got silicone paste, you can use that as well. This is what I have, so this is what I'm going to use. I'm just going to try to get it inside that boot area, all the way down in there. Oh yeah. That's nice. Going to do the same. Right there. I'm going to go head and put this all the way down in there. Wiggle it around. We're going to get lubricate everywhere that I can. The more, the merrier. Don't need to go too crazy with it though. I don't want to have people just putting the whole jar in there and saying, "Well, Lynn, I put it in. Now look at me."
Anyways, moving on. Grab the boot, just do this a little bit with it. It's just going to get everything worked in nice. That feels great. Nice. Going to do the same to this one over here. Get it flowing nice. Nice. Grab my rag. Now what we're going to do is we're going to lubricate our contact points. Contact points meaning where stuff meets onto the other parts, like the pads, right? Basically if this bracket was on, the pad would be sitting here. So we want to make sure that wherever the pads going to be touching up against the caliper, it's going to have a little bit of lubricant. It'll help the vibration, noise, rust I guess, all sorts of things really. So we'll just put that on there. So the same thing on the ears right here. Some people go more, some people go less. This is good for me, and I'm the one that's making the video. So let that be said.
We don't need to go any right around here. Nothing's touching there. Don't worry about that. If you wanted to, you can go ahead and put a little bit right here. Little bit right there. Those look fine. Maybe a little bit right here. Let's do right here. There we go. Yeah. Pretty. All right.
Now we've got our bracket. We did the inspection on it. Everything looks great. We've got our tins. Let me see if I can open this with my gloves on. Wow. That was easy. Okay. So we're going to want to inspect the tins. You're going to notice that they are different. We've got both these flaps going the same direction, but as you can see, this sides longer than this side. The reason for that is because the caliper doesn't sit... The rotator, sorry, won't sit directly in the middle of the caliper. So essentially you want to analyze the way that the other one is. You can take a look at it. You can even just try to line it up like this and see. I'm just going to go grab the other one, and I'll show you the difference.
So I brought over the old caliper because I wanted to show you the difference. As you can see, this side's longer than this side right here. So this would essentially match up if we put it over on this side, just like that. If we brought this one over on this slide, it would be pretty much like that. And then this doesn't line up. It's very different. So we want to make sure that we just get it on the same way. So we know that these are going to go this way, just like that. It does seem like they have a little bit of slack, and that's okay because what you'll notice is once we get the pads in there, then we get the caliper mounted down onto it, the caliper's going to hold pressure on these tins, and then the tins won't be able to move around. So we'll set those aside the way that we just figured out the way they go. We did that before we got lubricant on everything and all over ourselves.
We're just going to go ahead and put a little bit of our contact point lubricant, our caliper lube, if you want to call it that. Just go up and down like that. It's important to note that you don't want do the outside of the tins. You just want to do between the tins and the bracket. If for some reason you don't have this lubricant, you're going to probably want to get some and/or take this back apart after you get some and put this in because if you don't do this now, you're going to get rust in between here. What'll happen is you'll get rust. Rust will start to flake up the metal, and then these tins are going to expand out further towards your pads, blocking your pads in so they won't be able to slide. Your pads need to be able to slide on these bracket tins right here, move in and out a little bit with the squeezing and everything of the caliper. They need to be able to flow and move. If they get jammed in there, you're going to come out with pad issues.
As you can tell, these pads are worn pretty much evenly. But if you did have them frozen in a bracket, you might notice that they're worn at an angle somehow like this we'll say. From this side being very, very deep. That side might go down very low like that, we'll say, and then vice versa and/or you could have a pad that worns nice and thick like this is and then the other ones just like this thick. Just the whole way across. And that would be because it's frozen inside the bracket or the sliders are frozen.
So the way that this was set up before, everything looks like it was lubricated properly. So it shouldn't be too much of an issue going back together. Now we can continue on putting this back together.
So here we go. We're going to start putting this all together. We can do it right on a bench if you have a bench. If you don't, you can do it on the floor or whatever you have access to, your kitchen table. I wouldn't do it if your wife's watching. Anyways, we can tell which pad goes where. Whether it's the inner pad, which would have something like this, this looks like a circle, which is also where the piston would have ridden, or you can see right here, right here, that's where these would ride. So we know inner pad, outer pad. Very simple. You want to make sure that those go back where you got them from. If they were new, well you wouldn't really have to worry about that so much, would you? Since they're not, we're going to put them back where they came from.
So I'm going to go ahead and put these tins on, just like that. I'm going to grab my pads. Try to see if can work it in there. Okay. There's a little lip right here. If you can, it'd be nice to try to get the pad underneath there, and then the same on this side. What that's going to do is it's going to hold the pad from sliding around on you. If you need to, you can use a small pick or screwdriver, try to pry it up a little bit. There we are. Now this pad won't move around and fall out on me while I'm trying to work. I'm going to go ahead and do the same to the rear. Pry up a little bit. Oops, you didn't see that. Maybe you did. Don't tell.
There we go. See if I can get this one, back to this one. Beautiful. I might have had a little lubricant on my hands. So since I've been dealing with the friction pad or the friction material on the pads, just want to take a peek. I don't see any lubricant on there. If there was, you'd want to clean that off with some sort of solvent material.
So now we're going to grab the muscle. We're going to take note that this caliper has a little lip right here. It does not on this side. So that means when we're inserting the caliper, we're going to put this side under the bracket, and then work its way this way. So I'm going to take these caliper sliders. I'm going to push them back as far as they can go without popping the boot off. If it does, it's okay. Just put it back on. No big deal. Going to put this under here, drop that down and on. Let's see how it looks. That feels pretty nice. If you had some thread locker and you wanted to use that, you can. For this application, I'm not going to worry about it. Completely up to you.
We're going to start these bolts turning them in a clockwise motion. Once they start going in, we can go ahead and tighten them up. We want to make sure we have them both started though. You don't want to tighten one up without having the other one even started. It's going to cause you issues down the line. Generally speaking, that's a good habit for anything you're working on on cars. Just going to snug that puppy up. Grab this other one. There we are, and that was using my 12 millimeter socket, like we used to remove them.
Here's our caliper. It's all assembled. Now to put this on, we're just going to bring it over to the vehicle, we're going to make sure once again that there's no lubricant between here. So here we have our holes. We're going to try to line them up with our holes here. We have our two mounting bolts. Can use some thread locker if you want. I'm going to start with the top one. Just going to turn it to the right clockwise. Get that one started. And this one to the right. Now that these are both started in, we can go ahead and zip these down until they're bottomed out, and then we'll make sure they're tightened up to the proper specification.
So we got these pretty much almost all the way bottomed out. We're going to take our 21 millimeter socket again with our ratchet. You can use a wrench if you have it or an air gun. Just snug that up. Snug this up. Now we're clear to torque them down.
So I couldn't find a torque spec for this, so I'm just going to go ahead with my 21 millimeter socket, put it back on here. I'm going to make sure it's tight. I'm going to give it a bonk like that. I'm going to do the same for the lower one, the bottom one. That's tight. Now we've got our brake hose right here. We're going to make sure that we get our banjo bolt with our two cress washers. We'll hook that up. So we've got our banjo bolt. We made sure that it's nice and clean. It doesn't have one of these gaskets already on it. If it did, you want to make sure you take it off. I know I dropped two. So I'm going to install two. I'm just going to put one on here, and then I'm going to put it through the brake line, and then I'm going to put the other one. And this one's going to go between the brake line and the caliper itself.
Before I do that, I'm going to take a look at the brake hose, inspect it real quick, make sure there's no dirt or debris where these little gaskets are going to ride. Should be nice and clean, I wiped it down earlier. So like I said, I got one on the outside, now I have one on the inside. We're going to remove this little thing. This just helps keep moisture out of it during shipping. You can hold onto that and put it into your old caliper. Going to see about getting this started in here. It goes like this.
Then I'm going to take my socket and my ratchet again. I'm going to go with the 15 millimeter that we were using before to remove it. We're going to do it again. This time I'm going clockwise. That feels pretty good. You don't need to keep going. Once it bottoms out, just give it a little bit more. All we want to do is make sure we crush those copper gaskets right there. Now that those are crushed, we can go ahead and grab this ABS wire again. We'll put it into our three clips. One, two, three. So this is completely secure now. It's not flopping around. It's not going to get caught on anything. We can remove these. These out of the way.
Next what we'll do is we'll remove the bleeder screw cover. We'll break free the bleeder screw. We'll wait for it to have a steady stream of brake fluid coming out, and then we can continue the rake bleeding process at that point. But as for the manual part of doing the brake caliper, that's pretty much done. We just need to bleed it out.
So now we can use an 11 millimeter, whether it's a wrench or a socket. We're just going to turn this counterclockwise. For me, from my point of view, it would actually be clockwise. But if you're coming from the backside, you'd be turning it to the left counterclockwise. Now you would just leave this until you see a steady stream of fluid coming down into your recycling receptacle. Once you have that, you can go ahead and tighten this up, and then continue the bleeding process from there. Assuming this was all done, like I was saying, we'd just tighten it back up. Just like that. And then we want to make sure we put the boot back on.
Let's say we dropped it. It's gone, and, "Oh, no. Len, what am I going to do? I don't have one." Well, we kept the old one didn't we, just in case. Me, I didn't lose the original one because these things are like gold for me. But in case I did, I would have this old one. That's why it's very important to keep it, and all this does is it keeps the moisture and debris and gunk and all that crud from getting inside here, which will seize up your bleeder screw. Later on down the line, when you go to open this up again, you want to make sure there's nothing in there. You get water in there, it's going to rust everything up deep down in here, you'll break this off, and then you're buying yourself another caliper. This should be good to go for a long, long time.
All right. So we're going to grab this big ole wheel. We're going to put it up on here. I want to make it clear that you never want to lift with your back. You don't want to go like this and try to lift it up. Okay? I just felt my back crack actually just thinking about it. I'm going to grab it like this. I'm going to have my leg behind here. I'm going to lift it, roll it up onto my leg, and lift like this, right? Abs of steel. That's what they're there for. Ready. Nice and easy. Nice. Hold it. Get my lug nut on there. We've got our torque wrench set to 130 foot pounds, our 22 millimeter socket. We're going to start at the top, we're going to make a star pattern. One, two, three, four, five. Then you can go around again if you want.
One, two, three, four, five. If you want to go around again, go ahead. Just go around a circle in this time. We know the wheel's set in nice. So we can go in a circle. Some people will still go in a star, you can do that as well. Here we are.
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Tools used
Now I'm gonna remove the wheel. Take a 22-millimeter socket, remove the lug nuts. And pull the wheel off. Now, we're gonna take the brake caliper off. Use a 12-millimeter socket and take these two caliper bolts off. And grab the caliper. I'm gonna have to wiggle it back and forth a little bit and slide it out. Use a brake caliper hanger and attach it to the coil spring or somewhere that the brake hose is not being pulled on too hard. And just take a straight blade screwdriver, pry out the brake pads. I'm gonna take a 21-millimeter socket and take the caliper bracket bolts off. Pull those bolts off and slide the bracket back.
Now take a hammer and just tap on the rotor in those locations. Make sure you don't hit the studs. Now it's loose from the hub itself, but the brake, the parking brake shoes are holding me up a little bit, so I've got to loosen those up. On the backing shield, there's this little window right here, there's a rubber grommet. Just take your screwdriver, take that off. On the passenger side, this is on the bottom. On the driver's side, it's on the top. And then there's a little wheel right there that it's like a star wheel, it's the adjuster. You can take a screwdriver and just find something that fits or a brake spoon is what they call this. And then to tighten this up, you're gonna go and turn the wheel up just like this. You can grab the rotor and slide it right off.
Now you wanna clean the hub surface. Just use a wire brush or a die grinder. Just clean up some of the rust. I'm gonna take the rotor, put it on backwards first. Take some brake parts cleaner and just clean the rotor. Use a rag, wipe it off. Put the rotor around. Same on this side. And now we wanna adjust this up a little bit. Just us a little...either a screwdriver or a parking brake tool and just tighten it up. I just want it tight enough so that it just drags a little bit. That might be a little too tight. I'm just gonna loosen it. And you can always adjust it later. If it's not tight enough, tighten it up. And take this little cover. Just use a screwdriver or a pick and just insert that. That's good.
Now I'm gonna take the clips off. Take a wire brush, just clean off this area. Do the same on the other side. And take some brake caliper grease and just put it on this point and same on the other side. I'm gonna take these pad clips or pad slides, press that there. Same on this side. Now take the bracket and slide it in position over the rotor. Put the bolts back in. You can put some thread locker adhesive on these if you want to. And then torque these bolts to 132 foot-pounds.
You can put a little grease just where the pads are gonna slide on the slides. That's good. And take the pads themselves, line those up. Do the same on the inside, just like that. Now, take the brake caliper off the hanger. Before we compress the caliper, we have these slide caliper slides. You just take a screwdriver and push these through. Slide those out, clean these off with a little bit of brake parts cleaner, and wipe them down. Take a little brake caliper grease and grease them up. And if they were extremely dirty, you could take these and clean these out in here, but these weren't too bad so I'm just gonna take a little grease, slide those in there, and slide it back in. That's good. And then you can do the same for the other side. Now we wanna compress the caliper, slide the compressor tool in there, and slowly compress the caliper.
All right. Now that the piston's all the way in, now on the passenger side, you're gonna start with the caliper on the top and fold it down. And on the driver's side, it's gonna be opposite, and put the bolts back in and get those started. And then torque these bolts to 24 foot-pounds. And put the tire back up, and the lug nuts. Now, we're gonna torque the wheel, tighten this down to 130 foot-pounds in a star pattern so you tighten the wheel down evenly. Now you wanna pump the brake pedal nice and slow. There's gonna be an air gap between the brake caliper, piston, and the brake pads. And once it feels good, that's good. And you wanna double-check the brake fluid reservoir. Make sure you have plenty of brake fluid. Make sure it's up to the max line. Adjust accordingly.
Tools used
Tools used
Tools used
Tools used
Tools used
Now I'm gonna remove the wheel. Take a 22-millimeter socket and remove the lug nuts. And pull the wheel off. Now we're gonna take the brake caliper off. Use a 12-millimeter socket and take these two caliper bolts off. And grab the caliper. You might have to wiggle it back and forth a little bit. And slide it out. Use a brake caliper hanger and attach it to the coil spring or somewhere that the brake hose is not being pulled on too hard. And just take a straight blade screwdriver, pry out the brake pads. Now take a 21-millimeter socket and take the caliper bracket bolts off.
Pull those bolts off and slide the bracket back. Now take a hammer and just tap on the rotor in those locations. Make sure you don't hit the studs. Now it's loose from the hub itself, but the brake the parking brake shoes are holding me up a little bit so I got to loosen those up. On the backing shield, there's this little window right here. There's a rubber grommet. Just take your screwdriver, take that off. On the passenger side, this is on the bottom. On the driver's side, it's on the top. And then, there's a little wheel right there that if...it's like a star wheel, that's the adjuster. You can take a screwdriver and just find something that fits or a brake spoon, it's what they call this. And to tighten this up, you're gonna go and turn the wheel up. Just like this. And grab the rotor and slide it right off.
Now we need to remove these clips that hold the shoes on. I'm just gonna use a right-angle pick. Just get underneath the clip. Then I'm just gonna use a trim tool and just push down on this side of it as I slide the clip up. I'm just gonna take it off the pin. Just like that. And just try to pry this out a little like that. And do the same on the other side. Now I wanna get this adjuster out under here. It's kinda hard to get that spring off with the adjuster on there. So, I'm just gonna take two pry bars and just pry this out and just hopefully the adjuster will fall. There we go. Then with the shoes closer together, then the spring just comes out pretty easily. Grab the spring. Ther's the adjuster just fell out. And slide the spring out. Now there's two springs, there's a spring on the front side and a spring on the backside. And what you're gonna do is just try to get this off of out of this bracket right here. So, I'll use a pry bar and a screwdriver. Just try to pry this out a little bit. Same on this side.
There we go. Pop that spring out. And the other spring, let's pop that one out as well. There's that one. And here's that front shoe and the springs. So these springs, one spring goes on the backside, one spring goes on the front side like that. I'm gonna take these pins out. I am gonna re-use them because I don't have a hardware kit, but I just need to take them out. It's just gonna make putting the new shoes on easier. Put those aside and just take a wire brush and just any of the surface where the shoes touch the backing plate. Just clean those up a little bit. You could put a little grease on there if you want to. Now take the new shoes. Now, there is a top and a bottom and it's gonna be the opposite on the driver's side. There you go like that. So, for this side, this arch area it's gonna go on the top for both shoes.
Now, we want this spring we're gonna put both springs on before and we want one of the springs to end up behind here. So it has to go in behind there. So, it's a little tricky to get it in there. So hook that on right there and then there. The other spring you put it on the outside, right there and right there. So, these are together like this. Now what I'm gonna do is take the shoes and just go like this and then just rotate. This makes it easy, easier. And then take the shoe, and it has to go in between here and here. Just make sure that other spring doesn't pop out. And it's good like that. And then I'll take a screwdriver and just pry this one out, just like that. And there we go. Those are in position. And check your adjuster. If the adjuster doesn't move too easily, you wanna take it apart and just clean those threads up and then put some lubricant on those. This one moves pretty good. Now, I'll just put a little grease on here, just on the threads. To make putting the pins in a little easier, I'm just gonna put this adjuster in. Just pry this apart. You could use a pry bar if you want. That's lined up right there. Now take the pins, sometimes they call these nails. And then going from the back of the shield. And just get it lined up through the shoe. Now I'll just take this retainer and slide it up through here. And I'm sure they have special installers to put these on, but use what you can. I'm just gonna use this trim tool. There we go. It might take a little bit of effort. It's not too bad. Do the same on this other one.
Now I need to put this spring in, but it's gonna be very difficult to get that spring in with the adjuster in there. So, what I'm gonna do is just spread these shoes apart, take the adjuster out temporarily. And I can take the spring, push the shoes together. I'm just gonna use a screwdriver or a tool, get the spring lined up, so that's in there good. Now we can put the adjuster back in position. Just get it past the spring. I have to turn the hub a little bit. Now I'm gonna use two pry bars. Just pry this out a little bit and push the adjuster in place.
Just like that. Now you wanna clean the hub surface. Just use a wire brush or a die grinder. Just clean up some of the rust. And now take your rotor and slide that on. And now we wanna adjust this up a little bit. Just use a little, either a screwdriver or a parking brake tool, and just tighten it up. Just want it tight enough so that it just drags a little bit. That might be a little too tight. I'm just gonna loosen it. And you can always adjust it later. If it's not tight enough, tighten it up. And then take this little cover. Just use a screwdriver or a pick and just reinsert that. That's good. Now take the bracket and slide it in position over the rotor. Put the bolts back in. You can put some thread locker adhesive on these if you want to and then torque these to 132 foot-pounds. You can put a little grease just where the pads are gonna slide on the slides. That's good. And then take the pads themselves. Line those up. Do the same on the inside. Just like that. Now take the brake caliper off the hanger. Now we wanna compress the caliper and slide that compressor tool in there and slowly compress the caliper.
All right. Now that pistons all the way in, now on the passenger side, you're gonna start with the caliper on the top and fold it down and on the driver's side, it's gonna be the opposite. And put the bolts back in and get those started. And then torque these bolts to 24 foot-pounds. And then put the tire back up and the lug nuts. Now we're gonna torque the wheel, tighten this down to 130 foot-pounds in a star pattern so you tighten the wheel down evenly. Now you wanna pump the brake pedal nice and slow. There's gonna be an air gap between the brake caliper piston and the brake pads. And once it feels good, that's good. And you wanna double-check the brake fluid reservoir. Make sure you have plenty of brake fluid. Make sure it's up to the max line. Adjust accordingly.
Tools used
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