ChuckWoodChuck
TYF Newbie
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2024
- Posts
- 8
- Reaction score
- 12
It's just a basic white 2008 Ltz Tahoe. It's my wife's daily. My daily driver is a 79 F-150Pics of the truck, please.
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It's just a basic white 2008 Ltz Tahoe. It's my wife's daily. My daily driver is a 79 F-150Pics of the truck, please.
I had a corner that felt like the brake was sticking, and had warped the rotor. I thought it might have been a failure of the rubber line. But to make sure it was a messed up caliper I replaced everything except the master cylinder and the steel lines.
I drove it a short distance after the first bleed and no matter how hard I tried to brake the abs wouldn't engage and I had barely any brakes.
I am going to try and bench bleed the master.if everything else is right, the theory. I say theory cause you'd need to take it apart to find out and I don't know if anyone actually takes their old parts apart to inspect. but if you have a high mileage truck, the seals in the master have only gone say 2in in the bore their whole life and a ridge can build up at the stop point, you then bleed the brakes and the pedal goes all the way to the floor and the seal jumps that ridge a few times and gets damaged.
so that's why the wood under the pedal is recommended on older vehicles. Sadly you only really see that recommendation after it's to late if you don't spend time on the boards.
I didn't know the master needed to be pressurized while doing the automated bleed.When you're doing the automatic bleed, do you have 15psi of better on the master?
can you snap pics of the caliper bleeders?