ckinart
New Member
Hey all,
I recently discovered that my rear right brakes were in dire need of replacement (were pretty much disintegrated and showing obvious signs of heat damage) and the rear left weren't so great either. Assuming that the rear right wear was due to a seized caliper, I ended up having the calipers, rotors, pads and flex lines replaced on both sides (the left side was pretty tired as well).
Shortly after that, I noticed that my rear right wheel was occasionally very hot after some city driving (not aggressive). I replaced the e-brake cable on the right, but that didn't help. I took the car back to the shop that did the brakes originally, and they replaced the rear right caliper again saying it was "hanging up." Well, after all of this, I still find the rear right wheel to be very hot after city driving (not after every trip, but more often than not).
So, since the caliper has been replaced twice and the problem persists, I think the caliper can be ruled out. I've heard of the possibility of the caliper bracket being warped causing the slider pins to hang up, but I'm fairly certain this isn't the case as the slider pins are new and well greased, and slide freely. So the question is, can the rear brake bias valve cause this condition?
I plan to have the valve removed and just join the lines with unions (I have 4 wheel ABS and don't want to install a new valve if it could just cause me more problems in the future), but I want to be sure that I'm not wasting my time.
Any comments? If anyone can confirm that a bias valve can cause one side to stick and/or run hot, can you please explain?
Thanx in advance!!
<small>[ August 19, 2003, 06:51 PM: Message edited by: ckinart ]</small>
I recently discovered that my rear right brakes were in dire need of replacement (were pretty much disintegrated and showing obvious signs of heat damage) and the rear left weren't so great either. Assuming that the rear right wear was due to a seized caliper, I ended up having the calipers, rotors, pads and flex lines replaced on both sides (the left side was pretty tired as well).
Shortly after that, I noticed that my rear right wheel was occasionally very hot after some city driving (not aggressive). I replaced the e-brake cable on the right, but that didn't help. I took the car back to the shop that did the brakes originally, and they replaced the rear right caliper again saying it was "hanging up." Well, after all of this, I still find the rear right wheel to be very hot after city driving (not after every trip, but more often than not).
So, since the caliper has been replaced twice and the problem persists, I think the caliper can be ruled out. I've heard of the possibility of the caliper bracket being warped causing the slider pins to hang up, but I'm fairly certain this isn't the case as the slider pins are new and well greased, and slide freely. So the question is, can the rear brake bias valve cause this condition?
I plan to have the valve removed and just join the lines with unions (I have 4 wheel ABS and don't want to install a new valve if it could just cause me more problems in the future), but I want to be sure that I'm not wasting my time.
Any comments? If anyone can confirm that a bias valve can cause one side to stick and/or run hot, can you please explain?
Thanx in advance!!
<small>[ August 19, 2003, 06:51 PM: Message edited by: ckinart ]</small>