I am in the process of replacing front bearings on my 2004 z71 tahoe with about 145,000 miles. I replaced one side that was so far gone that when I lifted front end, i could shake wheel. Very scary.
Doing the other side now but having problems getting axle nut Off. Will work on that later today. The bearing on this side seems to be in better shape, but was going to just do both sides to avoid having this happen again (we were 400 miles from home when we started hearing sounds).
The front axles look good. Boots are in good shape. Do many people replace everything on the front including axles when you do bearings? I have heard of people using a needle to inject grease into the boots To lubricate?
I also noticed that the Driver side disk seem to have additional drag from the brake pads. When i pulled the disk, the back side does not seem to be contacting properly And the brake pads are not wearing down Evenly. I was going to push the pistons back in, and then bleed the brakes First to see if that helps… or is it better just to replace the piston?
Doing the other side now but having problems getting axle nut Off. Will work on that later today. The bearing on this side seems to be in better shape, but was going to just do both sides to avoid having this happen again (we were 400 miles from home when we started hearing sounds).
The front axles look good. Boots are in good shape. Do many people replace everything on the front including axles when you do bearings? I have heard of people using a needle to inject grease into the boots To lubricate?
I also noticed that the Driver side disk seem to have additional drag from the brake pads. When i pulled the disk, the back side does not seem to be contacting properly And the brake pads are not wearing down Evenly. I was going to push the pistons back in, and then bleed the brakes First to see if that helps… or is it better just to replace the piston?
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