Alright so I head over to the local Midas because they are advertising a brake special. I figure "Hey great! My brakes are screaching like a bish so I'll have them done". I walk in and ask for an estimate for front pads and rotors (98% of the time they tell you you will need new rotors). They qouted me over 300 bucks for the job. Now, I've looked into doing the job myself and I know that the parts needed are nowhere near that price. Nor should the work be insanely long. I've never had the brakes done on my bird before, so I'm curious, are they jacking me around?
I have one of those haynes manuals on the way and have been considering doing the work myself, but I've never done it before and I kinda want my bird to stop when I want it to. Is it that difficult of a job? I am moving cross country soon where there will be no friends or family nearby to help out. So the budget will be tight and learning this stuff would be insanely helpful.
I've read up on it at multiple websites and the basic rundown I have is this: I get the car up on jackstands, remove the wheels and unbolt the calipers (I'm assuming the bolts are on the back). Then remove the calipers and slide off the rotor. I then replace the old rotor with the new one (After having it turned at a shop, as I've been told not all rotors are 'True' out of the box). I remove the clips holding in the brake pads, add pad grease to the back of the new pads and replace old with new. Finally, everything is put back as it was and hopefully I have earned the ability to stop again.
I have read that there is a piston compression tool and some other tool I should buy or rent from a shop, but I'm not sure exactly what they are or understand how to use them. Can someone enlighten me?
I have one of those haynes manuals on the way and have been considering doing the work myself, but I've never done it before and I kinda want my bird to stop when I want it to. Is it that difficult of a job? I am moving cross country soon where there will be no friends or family nearby to help out. So the budget will be tight and learning this stuff would be insanely helpful.
I've read up on it at multiple websites and the basic rundown I have is this: I get the car up on jackstands, remove the wheels and unbolt the calipers (I'm assuming the bolts are on the back). Then remove the calipers and slide off the rotor. I then replace the old rotor with the new one (After having it turned at a shop, as I've been told not all rotors are 'True' out of the box). I remove the clips holding in the brake pads, add pad grease to the back of the new pads and replace old with new. Finally, everything is put back as it was and hopefully I have earned the ability to stop again.
I have read that there is a piston compression tool and some other tool I should buy or rent from a shop, but I'm not sure exactly what they are or understand how to use them. Can someone enlighten me?
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