RT
10-23-2005, 11:21
Since my original thread got a little off topic I just started a new one. New questions regarding brakes and bearings on the full-floating 14bolt rear axle in my 93 C2500. I tore the brakes/hubs down, replaced the bearings/races/seals. Installed new shoes (2.5"X13"), new wheel cylinders, hardware, and reassembled it all.
First question: I searched the forum on adjusting the "duo-servo" drum brakes and found the post back in 03 on adjusting until they drag and then backing off 33 clicks. I tried this and the pedal was very soft. My buddy is an ex-GM tech, he indicated that the auto-adjusters cycle with the activation of the parking brake. So I held the parking brake release and pumped the parking brake pedal repeatedly and it did exactly what he said it would. The soft pedal went away as the brakes self adjusted. The problem is the driver side is hanging up/dragging and the brake drum is very hot(too hot to touch) after a drive. I have tried backing of the star wheel adjuster and checked the wheel spins freely but it still is very hot after a drive. The passenger side is fine.
I removed the drum again to inspect and see what the problem could be. I could find no problems with the brake shoe install even after disassembling/reassembling it all again. The shoe still drags. Any ideas?
Second question: When I removed the axles from the hubs initially several ounces of gear oil poured out. I assumed that the gear oil is the lube "bath" for the FF hub bearings. Cleaning the hubs there was also heavy grease present so I assumed that the hubs operate in a combination grease/gear oil mix. Since I had to remove the axle/hub again to troubleshoot the problem in question 1, I noticed there was no gear lube present this second time. I packed the new bearings with grease when I installed them the first time. I did not put any addtional grease on the inside of the hub like I would normally do since I figured the gear oil lube would do the rest. Am I wrong? Should I have packed the hub with grease? Or does it take a while for the gear lube to make it down the axle tubes?
I did drain and refill the axle with fresh lube. Help! What the heck did I do wrong? Thanks, RT
First question: I searched the forum on adjusting the "duo-servo" drum brakes and found the post back in 03 on adjusting until they drag and then backing off 33 clicks. I tried this and the pedal was very soft. My buddy is an ex-GM tech, he indicated that the auto-adjusters cycle with the activation of the parking brake. So I held the parking brake release and pumped the parking brake pedal repeatedly and it did exactly what he said it would. The soft pedal went away as the brakes self adjusted. The problem is the driver side is hanging up/dragging and the brake drum is very hot(too hot to touch) after a drive. I have tried backing of the star wheel adjuster and checked the wheel spins freely but it still is very hot after a drive. The passenger side is fine.
I removed the drum again to inspect and see what the problem could be. I could find no problems with the brake shoe install even after disassembling/reassembling it all again. The shoe still drags. Any ideas?
Second question: When I removed the axles from the hubs initially several ounces of gear oil poured out. I assumed that the gear oil is the lube "bath" for the FF hub bearings. Cleaning the hubs there was also heavy grease present so I assumed that the hubs operate in a combination grease/gear oil mix. Since I had to remove the axle/hub again to troubleshoot the problem in question 1, I noticed there was no gear lube present this second time. I packed the new bearings with grease when I installed them the first time. I did not put any addtional grease on the inside of the hub like I would normally do since I figured the gear oil lube would do the rest. Am I wrong? Should I have packed the hub with grease? Or does it take a while for the gear lube to make it down the axle tubes?
I did drain and refill the axle with fresh lube. Help! What the heck did I do wrong? Thanks, RT