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Typical super duty , seized up caliper slides , 07s and newer are getting worse, leaking caliper pistons, frozen slides even on low mileage late models .
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typical superduty seized up slides . 07s and later are even worse , frozen slides, leaking pistons even late model low mileage trucks .
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Yep, super duty. I have the temp gun in the truck to check to see if it's dragging. The pins felt fine on both calipers and no leaks, but I appreciate the advice and will lube both of them.
Last year I had a front right caliper stick, both pins were frozen up completely. I replaced the caliper. I then checked the front left caliper and there was zero lube on the sliders, bone dry and rusty. Replaced those too but reused the caliper and bracket itself. I guess its time to do the same on the rears. Thanks! |
Originally Posted by BONDO10
(Post 3595866)
If it's a Ford you need to lube the caliper hardware/slide at least once a year. More often if your backing in the water. I lube all four caliper slides twice a year,or every time I rotate the tires.
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Does that pad now get classified as "metallic?" :lolhit:
And as others have said, on Ford Super Duty trucks, the rear caliper pins and sliders need occasional attention. Looks like the caliper hung up on yours. |
My 05 F350 SRW went through 7 rear calipers from new to 85k miles. (keep in mind we have salt water winters here) I am not hard on brakes, changed the pads only on the fronts at 50k and the old pads were still 65%.
The piston in the rear caliper is the problem IMO. It is made of a phenolic material. Once that piston gets just a little hot it grows, and will continue to hang up. I even had one crack and dump all my fluid. I could never feel the caliper dragging with the diesel. I ruined rims, rotors, changed brake lines, greased the slides twice a year......still always got stung. I used to carry line pinching pliers in the glove box of my $58k truck, if I noticed the caliper hanging I would pinch the line to save the rotor and rim while I drove home. Between the brakes and the $30k + in engine warranty repairs I sold the truck. |
Originally Posted by BONDO10
(Post 3595866)
If it's a Ford you need to lube the caliper hardware/slide at least once a year. More often if your backing in the water. I lube all four caliper slides twice a year,or every time I rotate the tires.
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Busted - if I remember correctly you have an F350. If so I will say that in the last 20k miles I have had 3 of my 4 brake calipers freeze up on my truck. Started noticing a smell and tracked it to the calipers locking up.
Not much work to replace obviously, but I was dissapointed none the less. Of course my truck came from NH so it saw some rust on occasion. |
Originally Posted by drpete3
(Post 3596132)
How is this done?
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