spk2000
Thread starter
Originally Posted by Donald
Originally Posted by Chris142
He is lucky that he did not break that cast iron ear off his spindle.
+1 that would have turned a little problem into a huge problem.
The Subaru has two threaded holes in the rotor. You put two bolts in them, tighten and then give it a whack and off it pops. Why don't all vehicles have that setup?
Mine has these 2 holes as well but pretty rusted shut. Would have needed to tap the holes out and i didn't have that size tap handy. I beat the tar out of the rotors from and back with a large rubber mallet and nothing. A heat shield limited some of my back access as well.
For those who thinks it puts a lot of stress on the ear. It did not. I was surpised using a 3/8 ratchet how little effort it actually took and how well it work. Also helped to put screwdriver in area that broke free as you worked another section to prevent it from going back.
I always use never seize for brake jobs as I typically do them every 4-6 years and by then everything is rusty and tight if you don't. I wasn't the last one on these brakes and could tell no anti-seize was ever used.
Thanks for all the replies and just sharing what worked for me hoping it will help someone else.
Originally Posted by Chris142
He is lucky that he did not break that cast iron ear off his spindle.
+1 that would have turned a little problem into a huge problem.
The Subaru has two threaded holes in the rotor. You put two bolts in them, tighten and then give it a whack and off it pops. Why don't all vehicles have that setup?
Mine has these 2 holes as well but pretty rusted shut. Would have needed to tap the holes out and i didn't have that size tap handy. I beat the tar out of the rotors from and back with a large rubber mallet and nothing. A heat shield limited some of my back access as well.
For those who thinks it puts a lot of stress on the ear. It did not. I was surpised using a 3/8 ratchet how little effort it actually took and how well it work. Also helped to put screwdriver in area that broke free as you worked another section to prevent it from going back.
I always use never seize for brake jobs as I typically do them every 4-6 years and by then everything is rusty and tight if you don't. I wasn't the last one on these brakes and could tell no anti-seize was ever used.
Thanks for all the replies and just sharing what worked for me hoping it will help someone else.