Another weekend, another bit of rather boring scheduled maintenance. As I mentioned earlier, there's something up with my drivers front brake caliper, it's locking up way sooner than it should. I'm also still having trouble getting the brake bias as far rear as I want it to be. The plan is to fix all that this weekend.
The GRM way to fix the front caliper is probably to rebuild it, after all, it's pretty hard to destroy a giant chunk of cast steel. And that was my plan too, but reman calipers were cheap enough to change my mind. Since I'm doing the drivers front, I also got a passenger caliper assuming that one is thinking about acting up any moment now. As it turns out, this was probably a good plan because whoever changed the brake pads on this car last was an a dolt, and this time that wasn't me.
In this photo of the caliper I pulled off the car, if you look closely you might notice that the pad spring thingies are missing. You'd be able to see them at the top of the caliper if they were installed. Also missing were the pad wear things, but no big loss there. If you look a little less hard, you might notice that this caliper is still fully assembled, I haven't removed the caliper from the frame. There's a good reason for that, the caliper guide pins (both of them) are stuck but good. Probably the same dolt that didn't install the springs also didn't bother putting any grease on those bolts, and they happily rusted into the rest of the caliper body. Both front calipers were like this. Luckily I got reman calipers with brackets. I mean, I can probably get those off, but since I don't need to I'm not gonna bother.
The next minor issue I ran into was with the reman calipers; the bolts for the caliper guide pins were a little too long. In the photo above, in the circled bit, you can see the threads sticking out of the bracket, perilously close to the rotor. I fixed this by adding a few washers to the bolt. acutally, the calipers actually came with some lock washers which didn't have another use and were the correct size. Those still weren't quite long enough, so I raided my box full of washers for a one more each. My other big annoyance with the reman calipers also relates to the guide pins, one of the bolts has a 12 mm head (like the stock one), and the other bolt has a 13 mm head (grrr). Toyota doesn't use 13mm heads anywhere, meaning sometime in the distant enough future that I forget about this, I'm going to look at that bolt and guess it's either a 12 or 14, and possibly round it off.
That brings us to pads. In the front (which is what we're looking at here), I got I got only the best Raybestos brand crap I could find. The idea here is that I don't really want a lot of bite in the front since I'm trying to shift more brake bias rearward. The pads came with all new clips for the calipers, but of course those clips didn't actually fit. Sure sign of amazing quality right there. Because I'm changing pad compounds, and because why not, I also got new rotors.
All in all, the fronts went on pretty quick. The rears though, they weren't so agreeable. To begin with, there's a lot less space back around the rear caliper because there's an axle and a hand brake cable crowding things up. That meant that it wasn't possible to get any of the power tools on any of the bolts to break them loose. I also had quite the time getting the bolts back on the caliper bracket after I took it off (to replace the rotor). But, the real fun started when I tried to install the new pads.
Between the new pads being not worn and thicker, and the rotor being not worn and thicker, there was just no way to get the damn caliper over the pads. To do it, I needed to push the piston back around 1-2 mm, but when I tried to do that in the normal way (which is probably not the Toyota approved method), the piston was bottomed out. I even tried opening the bleed valve to release some pressure on the brakes and push it in a bit more, but that didn't work. It was about this time I said berk it, and went inside for a bit.
Eventually I bothered to check the Toyota service manual, and they say you have to rotate the piston clockwise to push it in, because of course you do. I'm actually not sure if that's a normal thing, only that it wasn't required the last car I changed the brake pads on. After rotating the piston, everything went together pretty quickly.
Above you can see the new pads installed. Those are EBC yellows, which will probably dust up a storm and will likely destroy the rotors. Importantly though, they're super grippy and don't require much heat in them to work. I don't really care about the brake dust, the wheels get a nice thick protective covering of dirt on them in short order. Anyway, it's not like they were expensive.
So with that last bit of knowledge gained, I went off to start on the last wheel of my brake job. Of course, that's the oportune time for this to happen
It should come as no surprise that that is the bolt for the caliper guide pin, because remember that dolt who didn't grease the fronts... Apparently he also didn't grease the rears. It sheared off pretty deep inside the guide pin, which means that there's not an easy way to grab hold of it. Also, since it's still rust-welded to the bracket, there's no way to take apart the caliper, and I'm not sure I can remove the guide pin either. In short, it's good and buggered.