HOW TO - Replace the pads on your car's disc brakes

Geo has a really good Instructable on replacing the pads on your car's disc brakes, it isn't that hard and as one of the commenters (and MAKE pal Radiorental) says "Seriously - of all the odd jobs someone should learn this ought to be top of the list. A brake job at your local shop will easily run in $200 notes for an axle. Parts and 30-60 minutes of your own time ~$30-40. Probably one of the biggest scams/best kept secrets in automotive history. Maringally harder to replace than bicycle brakes..." - Link.
Related:
Transportation archives - Link.
Posted by Phillip Torrone |
Aug 23, 2006 03:43 PM
DIY Projects, Instructables, Transportation |
Permalink
| Comments (6)
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Comments
Oldest comments listed first.
Really aside from being dirtier and bigger installing pads on a car is easier in some ways than a bike. There are a great deal of easy fixes the auto repair shops charge loads of money to. A friend of mine who is a mechanic at a dealer told me he get paid for an hour labor even when the job takes 15 minutes. I dont fell like a car is really mine until I have worked on it.
Novabeatnik, I completely agree but people who havent done it would never beleive that statement. Most folks have replaced their bike breaks, my girlfriend wouldnh think twice about it. Tell these people that car breaks are marginally harder and they're will to give it a go.
She still insist on getting her oil changed at Valvoline (or wherever) because 'well they charge $50 so they must be doing some important stuff and checking things that need to be checked' I've tried explaining otherwise... a lot of people think that because a break change is $200 there's no way they could do that 'level' of work themselves. Its a bit of a con trick in my opinion, I'm just suprised garages collectively pull this off.
Every car's brake replacement procedure is slightly different. Here's my write-up for Mazda Protege5 brakes:
http://www.thinkythings.org/p5/brakes.html
Nothing's worse than getting partway through a job like this and getting stuck because you're missing a piece of expertise or a tool. My advice would be to get help from an experienced assistant your first time.
Reiteration of safety concern: car on a jack. A lot more unstable than it looks. Especially with only one wheel removed. Jackstands are a must in my opinion.
Brakes themselves are a vital part of safety in your car. Make sure you know what you are doing. Have someone with experience help, especially on the first time. It's easy to make a mistake (like, say, smear grease on the disk)
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