Front Brakes Pulling to the Left
#1
Front Brakes Pulling to the Left
I have a 2000 Lariat 2WD with about 94k miles on the clock. I noticed that it was pulling to the left when I applied brakes, and it got worse as time went on. I checked the front brakes and since the pads were getting thin I replaced them. Rotors didn't look bad so I left them alone. Both calipers compressed easily and smoothly when I installed the pads, but it still pulled to the left. I drove it for a couple thousand miles hoping the problem would go away, but no luck.
As plan B, I replaced the front rotors and wheel bearings. With the old rotors off, I saw that there was some pitting on the inboard sides of both rotors, and the driver's side was a little worse. I thought I'd found the problem, but again no luck.
As a last resort, I swapped sides with the pads, but this didn't make a difference either. I'm running out of ideas. I don't think it's the calipers because they compressed smoothly when I installed the pads, and both wheels spin easily and equally when I have the front end in the air.
Any suggestions on where to look next? Thanks.
As plan B, I replaced the front rotors and wheel bearings. With the old rotors off, I saw that there was some pitting on the inboard sides of both rotors, and the driver's side was a little worse. I thought I'd found the problem, but again no luck.
As a last resort, I swapped sides with the pads, but this didn't make a difference either. I'm running out of ideas. I don't think it's the calipers because they compressed smoothly when I installed the pads, and both wheels spin easily and equally when I have the front end in the air.
Any suggestions on where to look next? Thanks.
#2
Mark
iTrader: (1)
get an Alignment
#3
I am not much of a mechanic but maybe this will help you a little. I had a bronco with the same problem replaced pads rotors and calibers but was still having the same issue. I know that doesn't tell you what's officially wrong but from that experience I would say it is definatly not the calibers. I do agree from the above I would try an alignment. If you have a firestone close by they used to have a life time alignment deal was a little more expensive but you could always take it back in as Long as you owned the truck and they would redo the alignment at no charge.
#6
It's not an alignment issue. It's a caliper, slider pin, or hose issue. If both calipers compressed easily and seem to be working properly, then replace the front brakes hoses, and make sure the sliders are sliding smoothly with little effort. If not, replace them. One of the hoses likely has a tear on the inner liner.
#7
Mark
iTrader: (1)
It's not an alignment issue. It's a caliper, slider pin, or hose issue. If both calipers compressed easily and seem to be working properly, then replace the front brakes hoses, and make sure the sliders are sliding smoothly with little effort. If not, replace them. One of the hoses likely has a tear on the inner liner.
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#8
There is a rubber brake hose that goes directly into your front calipers. Sometimes the rubber will break down and won't allow the brake fluid to flow properly Into the caliper. It will go in slower and come out slower. I had that problem on my 98 f150. Replaced the hose and it was good to go!
#9
Senior Member
antoher thing to check is to lift the front end and have somebody inside pushing on the brake, as you lean on one tire at a time have them release the brake and see if it drags. compare both sides and if one side is slower to move then you problem is on that side. if both move the same then I would start looking at the brake hoses