Several weeks ago my truck was pulling to the right when driving, and pulling even worse during braking. I pulled both front calipers, (first time since I bought the truck last year) and noted that the caliper slides were pretty nasty with rust. I cleaned the slides with a wire wheel in my drill, used anti-seize to lubricate them, and reassembled.
Everything was fine for a few weeks, and the pulling was gone. Last week it started pulling right again. Upon inspection, it appeared that the anti-seize had gummed up some, so I pulled both calipers again, recleaned the slides, and used a sharpening stone to smooth them. This time I used Permatex synthetic disc brake caliper lube on the slides.
Again, the pull is gone, but I'm wondering for how long? Is this going to become a maintenance ritual like oil changes, or was I just using the wrong lubricant the first time??
By the way, is it only me, or is the Bendix caliper slide design just plain terrible. Caliper mounting with the key and spring is a PITA, and the design seems to invite dirt and rust to live on those slides.
Any insight would be greatly appreciated, guys. Thanks!
- Mike
Everything was fine for a few weeks, and the pulling was gone. Last week it started pulling right again. Upon inspection, it appeared that the anti-seize had gummed up some, so I pulled both calipers again, recleaned the slides, and used a sharpening stone to smooth them. This time I used Permatex synthetic disc brake caliper lube on the slides.
Again, the pull is gone, but I'm wondering for how long? Is this going to become a maintenance ritual like oil changes, or was I just using the wrong lubricant the first time??
By the way, is it only me, or is the Bendix caliper slide design just plain terrible. Caliper mounting with the key and spring is a PITA, and the design seems to invite dirt and rust to live on those slides.
Any insight would be greatly appreciated, guys. Thanks!
- Mike
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