mcmxi
Well-known member
Lifetime Member
Equipment
***Current*** M6060HDC, MX6000HSTC & GL7000 ***Sold*** MX6000HST & BX25DLB
I've owned and driven cars and trucks for over 40 years, and have done 99% of my own maintenance and repairs on those vehicles. I've driven all over the US, Europe and Australia, East to West, North to South, hundreds of thousands of miles, but I've never broken down, never ran out of fuel, and never needed to be towed. Is that luck? In part, but not mostly.
About a week ago I started to hear and feel a grinding sound from what I thought was the front left brake rotor. I took a quick look at both front rotors (outside only) and they appeared to be pristine. I had installed Brakemotive cross-drilled and slotted rotors along with Brakemotive pads almost 56,000 miles ago. I did that because the front OE rotors were warped when I bought the truck from a friend.
I was going to do a thorough inspection this coming weekend, but on the way back from meeting friends for dinner last night, my luck almost ran out. I came to a stop at a traffic light at the bottom of a hill about 15 miles from home and the grinding up front was bad, and when I stopped it felt like the front left wheel had locked up. Foolishly or not, when the light went green I had to put the foot into it a bit to get going and made it home without further trouble.
This morning I jacked up the front of the truck and spun the front left wheel which turned freely and without any odd grinding noise so my first thought was "well that's weird!". I went to the right front and tried to rotate the wheel and it wouldn't budge. When I pulled off the wheel and removed the caliper I soon saw what the problem was!
In all my years of owning and driving vehicles I've never seen such carnage! The oddest thing is that the inside pads on all four calipers have worn down to next to nothing whereas the outside pads have plenty of material on them. Needless to say, I placed an order for new front and rear rotors and pads, and called NAPA to see if they have Ford F250 calipers in stock since no one has a complete caliper rebuild kit that includes pistons.
The first two photos show the front right caliper and pads, and the third photo shows the difference in outer to inner pad thickness on the front left brake system. The rears are very similar to the front left.
About a week ago I started to hear and feel a grinding sound from what I thought was the front left brake rotor. I took a quick look at both front rotors (outside only) and they appeared to be pristine. I had installed Brakemotive cross-drilled and slotted rotors along with Brakemotive pads almost 56,000 miles ago. I did that because the front OE rotors were warped when I bought the truck from a friend.
I was going to do a thorough inspection this coming weekend, but on the way back from meeting friends for dinner last night, my luck almost ran out. I came to a stop at a traffic light at the bottom of a hill about 15 miles from home and the grinding up front was bad, and when I stopped it felt like the front left wheel had locked up. Foolishly or not, when the light went green I had to put the foot into it a bit to get going and made it home without further trouble.
This morning I jacked up the front of the truck and spun the front left wheel which turned freely and without any odd grinding noise so my first thought was "well that's weird!". I went to the right front and tried to rotate the wheel and it wouldn't budge. When I pulled off the wheel and removed the caliper I soon saw what the problem was!
In all my years of owning and driving vehicles I've never seen such carnage! The oddest thing is that the inside pads on all four calipers have worn down to next to nothing whereas the outside pads have plenty of material on them. Needless to say, I placed an order for new front and rear rotors and pads, and called NAPA to see if they have Ford F250 calipers in stock since no one has a complete caliper rebuild kit that includes pistons.
The first two photos show the front right caliper and pads, and the third photo shows the difference in outer to inner pad thickness on the front left brake system. The rears are very similar to the front left.
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