OK, I GOT A WEIRD ONE. I was on my way to Vegas in my 2010 honda civic. I started getting this annoying grating sound in my left front wheel well. I highly assumed I either picked up a rock in my pad/rotor or cracked a pad. It almost sounds as if u put a bolt through a metal sleeve and then lightly lowered it onto to a spinning disk. when I hit the brakes it would go away. Sometimes. I can hear the sound vary with brake pressure. Then for nearly a hundred miles it stopped. Then I noticed on lane changes it would start up. I havent tore the caliper off yet, gotta go to work in a bit . Car has 33,000 miles. Other than a somewhat obvious pad issue could a bearing act this way? Come and go and vary with lane bumps? Pads look meaty still.any thoughts?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Non jeep related mechanical issue.. SORRYYYYYY
Collapse
Forum Thread First Post
Collapse
X
-
Check the wear indicators on the pads. If the caliper is sticking, it can wear only the piston side and that pad's tattle tale will ride on the disc. Our JK had even wear, but wold come and go with speed and bumps - wierd. Also check the CV axle. Does it happen more when turning?God forgives, rocks don't
-sons of thunder
-
yeah I'm praying it is actually. I tried to get the calipers off before dashing to work but those things are on there insanely tight. Will pop them off tomorrow. Pads look pretty thick but I'm not familiar with what new ones look like in way of thickness... Good reason for a change anyways. cant hurt.... I played with the indicators and pushed them inward and it didnt make any noise for my 25 mile comute.1st batch TJ bought August of 96. Locked and Loaded!
Comment
-
Originally posted by 6spdYJ View PostCheck the wear indicators on the pads. If the caliper is sticking, it can wear only the piston side and that pad's tattle tale will ride on the disc. Our JK had even wear, but wold come and go with speed and bumps - wierd. Also check the CV axle. Does it happen more when turning?1st batch TJ bought August of 96. Locked and Loaded!
Comment
-
Cool. One thing to keep an eye on is the condition of the slider pins as well as their bores. Sometimes the bore will wear and the pads will hold things in proper alignment for a while, but bind when they hit the worn spot. Some calipers have replaceable bronze bushings for the sliders but some are better off replaced.God forgives, rocks don't
-sons of thunder
Comment
-
By design, most vehicles wear the inside slightly faster (sliding caliper). The slider pins commonly drag or stick and no one ever cleans and lubes them. You get a vehicle with a few brake jobs done and the next thing you know its only stopping with the inner pad. I have a few rotors at work where the inside of the rotor is worn into the fins and the outside still has meat on it. Funny thing is the customers all said "it just started making noise". The pads and and backing plates were gone, they were stopping with the caliper piston against the rotor.Come to the dark side.....
We have Cookies!
Comment
-
Originally posted by Zoobi View PostThe pads and and backing plates were gone, they were stopping with the caliper piston against the rotor.If we aren't supposed to eat animals, then why are they made out of meat?
http://jeep.matandtiff.com/
Truth is treason in the empire of lies. -Ron Paul
Comment
-
Yea
When I showed it to my class one of the students said "Imposable, Ive been working for pep boys for almost a year and I never saw that". Two weeks later he brings me in a rotor and says "damn, never thought it was possible". He also stated the customer said "it just started making noise".Come to the dark side.....
We have Cookies!
Comment
Comment