Its a wise move. I did mine a year ago. It works great! Only had one problem. Depending on what cable arragement for the park brake was installed , you might have trouble. I had the cable that used an off- set adjustment. It worked fine for drums but not the disc conversion. I had to remove the short intermediate cable and add a turnbuckle. I also had to weld the cable guides to the holding brackets. If you run into this problem let me know. I'll e-mail you photos of my rear axle and park brake set up.Originally posted by jburelle
has anybody put disk brakes on the rear axle? and if so where did you get them?
Originally posted by JAmos
What difference does this make in stopping power?(rear disc brakes) I have been wondering lately what I should to to improve my braking performance. I put ceramic pads on the front didn't notice much difference. Sometimes it seems like the brakes fade for several seconds and then grab again. I don't hear an ABS buzz or chatter, just lose some braking power for a few seconds. I just checked the shoes/pads and no oil/grease/ect. They still have good wear left. Seems same on dirt and pavement. Have tried to listen but can't hear/feel skidding. I should say that on dirt roads they will sometimes fade then lock up the rears. As I am usually stopping at a stop sign/somebody pulling out in front of me/ect. it a straight line. I haven't noticed the fronts lock up or loss of steering. I don't think that sand on the roads from snow storms is a factor either. By the way this is during harder/faster stops. Am I expecting too much, or is there something better out there? Always important to stop before we run over the honda's after we just wasted a ford or chevy. TIA Jordan
The only thing I could think of to do that would be a worn or stiff rachet set on the brake release. Is the spring broken? rachet hammer loose? try setting the park brake while stepping on the brake pedal at the same time. Then try rocking the truck back and forth in the gears to see what is letting go.Originally posted by JAmos
No one has experienced this? See prev. post.
A note on the Kevlar brake-in: You must do extreme braking about 5 times (55 mph to full stop) to burn the material in. Then let them cool down completely. A slow easy brake-in will not work. Ask the brake experts at EGR.Originally posted by JRS
I replaced my rear wheel cylinders with the 1 ton and replaced the shoes with full carbon-kevlar shoes from Porterfield. (I purchase brake pads for my race car from them) Carbon-Kevlar works best at higher temps. , so higher drum temps. is not a problem for the material. Also, when replacing the shoes/cylinders check your star wheels. I have replaced the one on the right side of my truck twice now. The other two had frozend up. In fact, when I first went into the auto parts store down the street from me, the guy behind the counter recognized the part in my hand and had a new one sitting on the counter by the time I got there. This is never a good sign! ;-) He doesn't even stock the left side wheels, just the right. Oh, and it goes without saying, any brand of pad or shoe you get should be bedded in before you go out and "really test" the brakes. Early extreme testing forces up resins from the material to the surface. they will glaze over and/or you will get green fade. Some pads/shoes say "bedded in at the factory". The still should be bedded in.
Maybe. I purchased mine from EGR when I changed the front rotors. The guy told me on the phone that you had to seat them in hard to get 100% efficency. Something about the pads wearing out too soon or uneven heat transfer. I did what he said and its been the best set of pads I ever had. No fadeOriginally posted by JRS
Maybe they sell a different kind of Carbon-Kevlar pad. I just followed the directions that Porterfield sent me.