|
Pull your tire off and check your rotors yourself. If they have deep groove in them then take them and get them machined. If you go to some place like autozone or oriely's they may tell you that there is not enough metal on the rotors to turn them and you need new rotors. Before you dish out the money on new rotors take them to a machine shop and see what they say. Reason being is most of the clowns that work at autozone or oriely type stores dont even know how to use a caliper much less read one.
If the rotors dont look too bad (just have some scratching or light lines, not too deep, you can tell) then just go to autozone or oriely's and pick up some brake pads. Will cost in the $20-$30 range probably. If they have not been grinding long, this may be the case. It is good practice to have them turned whenever you do a brake job. But its not always necessary.
To remove the caliper. You need a C clamp (8-10 incher will do). Use the C clamp to press the brake pads together, this compresses the caliper so you can get the caliper off the rotor. After compressing the pads, there should only be a single bolt you take out and the caliper will just swivel upwards off the rotor. From here you will need to use the C clamp to compress the caliper until it is flush. Make sure to leave the old brake pad on the caliper for the C clamp to rest on.
After this, just clean it up a little bit, taking care not to puncher any of the rubber in the caliper. The new brake pads go back in the same way the old ones came out, they just pop into slots. Place the calipers with new brake pads back over the rotors. Replace the bolt and tighten bolt snug, do not over tighten, you dont want to strip anything out. Put tire back on and your good to go. Also to remove the bolt from the caliper you will either use a socket wrench, a closed or open end wrench, or a large allen wrench. You just have to check and see which one is required.
Some things to remember. Before taking the car out of park after you have replaced the brakes. Make sure you pump the brakes after starting to build the brake pressure back up to where it should be. The last thing you want to do is replace your brakes, then jump in start the car and throw it in gear. You'll get moving and step on your brakes and find there's nothing there. So pump them up to build the pressure before you ever take car out of park.
Front disk brakes are very easy to replace on a vehicle. Only do one side at a time, that way if you forget where something goes you will have the other side to look at. Mostly this pertains to the rear drum brakes, but you can use the same theory on the front disk brakes.
Never pay a mechanic the ungodly price they charge for something you can do yourself. Mechanics around here charge a minimum of $50 hr. A brake job will take 30 minutes if all your doing is replacing the rotor pads. Less if you multi task.
|