We actually re-manufacturer HD Clutches and brakes for Class 5 and above trucks... . and Manufacturer new HD clutches... As well as being a PacBrake Dist... .
What we see is heat damage..... on some trucks we actually install a piece of friction between the piston and pad to prevent the heat from moving to the piston and boot... but on light pickups there is not the room for this... .
Remember to wire brush and the metal to metal surfaces where the caliper floats on the backing plate, we install some very nasty grease, that won't wash off..... very, very thin film... ... if the caliper can't float more problems will occur...
Watch your braking... . long down hill with a large trailer will usually over heat the brakes, might cause some fade and push that heat into the boot... . my daughters MIL drives her truck (auto) with 2 feet, resting her left foot on the brake pedal and the right foot on the throttle... her husband gave up years ago trying to brake the habit so he just pays the repair bill once a year to do the brakes... usually under 30K miles... .
Use a very little bit of anti-sieze on the bleeder when you install it... the brake fluid will draw water and cause rust... a very little bit of prevention on the bleeder, keeping it out of the caliper will allow you to remove that bleeder months later or years later... .
Bleed out the dirty fluid and moisture once a year no matter what the mileage... .
I personally have not seen a bad hose or ABS system problem in at least 5 years... if a hose goes bad it usually will balloon and allow the system to not brake correctly...
I test for this problem by taking the truck to a slight grade, and stop the truck and release the brakes... I look to see if it will start to roll under its own weight... . if it does the brake pads are released... I've done this so often with the old fords we used to own that I now do it a habit with everything we own... always get to a stop light and put the automatic in N or the stick in N and release the clutch and brake... . and wait to see if it will start to roll.....
Hope all this helps..... I can write more if necessary...
Added later... ... disc brake pads always drag... . when you release the brake pedal the pressure in the brake system drops to zero... the piston will release and the caliper should float on the backing plate... . but some pad drag will always be there... . thats why I suggested the roll test above... . the engineers who designed these systems, left the piston out and the caliper center, unlike brake shoes which retract because of spring pressure... by not fully retracting the delay from smashing the pedal to brake application is reduced by a fraction of a second... . that means short stopping distance which might save you some day...