Nice job! How was the Capri tool to work with?
Compact and easy.Nice job! How was the Capri tool to work with?
Good idea. I don’t think it’s the parking brake though. It happens when driving very slow, like 5mph or less, coming to a stop, and then goes away when I let off the brake.Try applying the park brake lightly when moving, a few seconds usually does the trick if it is a little rust on the inside of the rotor drum.
Not a parking brake. Definitely an iffy brake pad.Try applying the park brake lightly when moving, a few seconds usually does the trick if it is a little rust on the inside of the rotor drum.
That’s my thoughtI would call it broken/corroded. Replace the rotors and pads, check to piston moves without to much effort, cleanup the bracket and replace/lube any pins. Replace with Zimmerman rotors and ATE pads?
Nice work! I’d never done brake lines before either and replaced all the hard lines on a Chevy tracker with that tool and nickel copper line. It’s not hard if you have all the right fittingsI should have posted closure of the issue here, but I posted in the thread about flares and nuts instead.
I have a thread on repair of my 2008 MB ML320, but this is more general, so I’m making my own thread.
Here is a failed bubble thread line and nut:
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Note the flatness of the bottom of the flare, and the squarish shoulders of the nut.
Now, compare to two nuts I’ve received that are supposedly for bubble flares:
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Note how they have a tapered inner diameter?
The right one is OE, the far left is AGS and explicitly says bubble on the box. The middle is SURR, and is supposed to be for bubble.
I don’t think I’m crazy either. It seems that the...
- JHZR2
- Replies: 37
- Forum: Mechanical/Maintenance Forum
In the end, used nicopp cunifer UK line, a capri DIN flare tool, and stainless armor.
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Thanks! It would have been less of a wild goose chase if the parts stores had the right fittings. A Japanese or domestic vehicle I think would be OK.Nice work! I’d never done brake lines before either and replaced all the hard lines on a Chevy tracker with that tool and nickel copper line. It’s not hard if you have all the right fittings
I would call it broken/corroded. Replace the rotors and pads, check to insure the piston moves without too much effort, cleanup the bracket and replace/lube any pins. Replace with Zimmerman rotors and ATE pads?
Normal, it takes a while for the pad to reach even pressure across the entire surface. Recheck in a thousand miles or so.Bedded them in, no noise, good and hot. Maybe not hard enough though yet?
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Notice the buildup on the pad top from scraping off the coating.
Thanks. I think the cars I’ve used these on in the past have all had pistons on either side of the rotor.Normal, it takes a while for the pad to reach even pressure across the entire surface. Recheck in a thousand miles or so.