![]() | |
![]() |
| | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
#1
| |||
| |||
|
#2
| |||
| |||
|
|
It seems to make a scraping sound after the ebrake is released and sometimes when I really press hard, it just sounds like I need new pads or metal to metal. I wonder if these cars have piston problems? |
#3
| |||
| |||
|
|
"daviddare73 (AT) gmail (DOT) com" wrote: It seems to make a scraping sound after the ebrake is released and sometimes when I really press hard, it just sounds like I need new pads or metal to metal. I wonder if these cars have piston problems? Hi, Do you know the history of the car and its brake maintenance? At 20 yrs old, if the brakes haven't been flushed on a regular basis, there will be a LOT of crud in the calipers and cylinders. So a sticky piston is hardly out of the question. Are you pretty mechanical? If so, you might want to get rebuild kits for the front calipers and rebuild them. Check, clean and lube everything involved w/ the parking brake system as well--a sticking cable could cause the same kind of drag a sticky piston would. A "cheap and dirty" fix in the front sometimes involves simply replacing the pads: you have to screw the piston back into the caliper to create the clearance for the thicker new pads, and once in a while just that action will free a sticky piston. Consider it "temporary" though--you've really gotta get the crud out of the system to make the fix last! At the rear, you may be able to get rebuild kits as well, but considering what cylinders have looked like on similar age cars I've played with, you could be money ahead to simply install new cylinders. Rick |
#4
| |||
| |||
|
|
The crud would require very bad fluid and 150 degrees outside for a decade. I have never heard of such a thing. |
#5
| |||
| |||
|
|
"daviddar... (AT) gmail (DOT) com" wrote: It seems to make a scraping sound after the ebrake is released and sometimes when I really press hard, it just sounds like I need new pads or metal to metal. I wonder if these cars have piston problems?Hi, Do you know the history of the car and its brake maintenance? At 20 yrs old, if the brakes haven't been flushed on a regular basis, there will be a LOT of crud in the calipers and cylinders. So a sticky piston is hardly out of the question. Are you pretty mechanical? If so, you might want to get rebuild kits for the front calipers and rebuild them. Check, clean and lube everything involved w/ the parking brake system as well--a sticking cable could cause the same kind of drag a sticky piston would. A "cheap and dirty" fix in the front sometimes involves simply replacing the pads: you have to screw the piston back into the caliper to create the clearance for the thicker new pads, and once in a while just that action will free a sticky piston. Consider it "temporary" though--you've really gotta get the crud out of the system to make the fix last! At the rear, you may be able to get rebuild kits as well, but considering what cylinders have looked like on similar age cars I've played with, you could be money ahead to simply install new cylinders. Rick |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
| |