Anyone here do a DIY brake change on the 5thgen yet? I noticed that the service manual calls for replacing the bolts that fasten the caliper to the knuckle if they are removed.
Have others followed this step? And do you think the average brake shop would take this step?
Everyone is using the word "Bolt" I imagine we're all referring to the caliper slide pins?
Yea, I've never replaced one of those. I usually try to replace the boot/rubber, if it comes in the kit, but not the pins.
99% of the time, I completely wipe away all the old grease from the pins, and I try to remove some of the old grease from the boots/hole.
Putting it back together, I will lightly pack the boot with fresh grease, then I'll put a nice long bead along the length of the bolt.
Be advised that if you're doing rears you should disconnect the battery. If the e-brake gets initialized the motors will run to its limit and I've been told it's a very hard process to get them back into home position.
There is a service mode, which should be preferred. If anything, it retracts the piston so the fresh pads will insert properly. Disconnecting the battery will only stop the motion.
I actually learned this the hard way on my old CX-5. Never worked on an electronic E-brake. I took the calipers off, I couldn't get the pistons back in, so I thought it would be a good idea to fiddle with the button, thinking they would retract on their own. BIG MISTAKE!!
The motor started winding the piston out, and it kept going, and going, and going, and there was nothing I could do to stop it. Eventually, the piston reached its max position, it was no longer threaded on the motor, and the motor finally timed out. I had to disassemble the motor to get to the back of the shaft, then I had to screw the piston all the way back to its home position.
That caliper was never the same, again. Right before I sold the car (to a dealership), I was having trouble getting the e-brake to retract during normal operation. The first time I had a locked wheel and I had to fiddle for 10 minutes before it retracted. The second time, it was partially engaged while I was driving. I turned the rotor bright red until I could smell it and I pulled over. Again, I fiddled for about 10 minutes and it finally retracted.
Update - just did the back pads and rotors at 39k miles. My pads were down to nothing - one was less than a mm away from metal. Actually couldn't find new hardware (spring and clips) anywhere so cleaned and reused what I had. Few notes:
-Electronic parking brake retractor works like a champ. On a $120,000 BMW you have to hook up a computer to retract. I love RAM has a box to click in the menu. Easey peasey.
-May be normal on trucks but both back brakes have a parking brake on them. Still plenty of room to work.
-After having a really tough time with the rotor retaining screw on the fronts - I gave these a hard bang with a socket extender and a hammer....came out easy. Make sure to do this first as the retaining screw is cheap and will easily strip.
-Rotors were super rusted on (truck gets a lot of miles and a lot of road salt and not enough washes) and it doesn't seem like RAM applies any anti seize before installing them. Popped them off by using a nut/bolt washer through the lower caliper mounting bolt hole. Hold the nut with a wrench and turn the bolt with my impact wrench and boom. Pops right off. If you do this - make sure you have a few bolts...when I went to reuse the one I used for the first rotor - the bolt snapped! video where I got the idea here:
The rotor method seems to work, but I still prefer the hammer method. Whack, 90°, Whack, 90°, Whack, 90°, Whack, until it comes off. Usually 1-3 hits will do it.
Through the years I have hit pleny of rotors and drums with hammers, though I always used the non-surfaced areas as points of impact - a few whacks on the hub of a rotor is all it usually took. I wouldn't be super comfortable pushing the rotor from behind with a small bolt, but probably less comfortable hitting face of it.
Nea, I hit right on the face. Fu*k it, they're going in the scrap pile anyway.
Is there not a service mode like most vehicles have?
Ram made it pretty easy to get to. I stumbled on it the first time I went through the menu to personalize my vehicle.
My CX-5 had it buried somewhere, but IIRC, I had to do a little song and tap dance to enter service mode. It required me to enroll in YouTube University for a quick class.
Lesson learned from my story above, I'll never fu7king service an electronic parking brake without finding that menu.