Did my brakes today! Next stop: Mid-Ohio tomorrow.

Kinja'd!!! "stuckMTB" (stuckmtb)
06/14/2020 at 14:38 • Filed to: Parking Lot Mechanic, Corvette, DIYlopnik

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My Corvette up in the air just before digging into the rear brakes.

I spent the better part of yesterday afternoon wrenching in a nearby parking lot with some buddies... turns out between us we had four cars in serious need of brake work. Our motley crew consisted of a 2007 H3 with a leaky caliper, a 1989 325 that’s slowly becoming a race car, a 2003 Honda Accord 5 speed that I sold to a friend years ago that he’s been neglecting for ages, and my 2009 C6.

The Hummer’s caliper replacement went easily enough. We only got hung up during the bleeding procedure when we failed to realize that we needed to turn the thing on to actually get hydraulic pressure to the rear rotors. Apparently on those beasts, you can bleed the fronts while it’s off but not the rears.

The BMW was unfortunately sidelined by a broken handbrake shoe return spring, and my old Honda is slowly turning to a giant pile of Fe2O3 under the stewardship (read: neglect) of it’s new owner. The left rear rotor was so worn down that it had completely rusted over due to the rotor being so far beyond the minimum thickness that the pads don’t even contact it anymore. He also encountered several bolts that just stripped right out, requiring us to run out for new parts midway through the job. Anyways, we got that one buttoned up enough to get it back on the road.

My car was   the newest and in the nicest shape, but it still needed new rotors and pads on all four corners. I think it still had the original rotors on it after 62,000 miles, judging by the size of the lip at the edge of the pad wear area on the rotors . The fact that it has never seen snow or salt made the job pretty straightforward, except for the fact that the caliper bracket bolts really didn’t want to let go unless I used my buddy’s VERY big breaker bar.

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Shiny new rotors!

I probably should have gone with some nicer slotted rotors instead of replacing with another set of drilled OEM rotors, but the cost difference was enough that it didn’t seem worth it to me. Plus, my old rotors never cracked so bad they gave me any safety concerns, so I’m going to hope these perform the same. After getting the stubborn bolts loose, everything was pretty easy and a couple hours later I had some nice shiny new metal on all four corners !

Last step was a few hot-laps on the local service drive to complete my pad-bedding procedure. Now I’m all set for my HPDE at Mid-Ohio tomorrow and won’t have to worry about burning through my pads !

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Brand new, soon to be dust-filled rotors!


DISCUSSION (4)


Kinja'd!!! ADabOfOppo; Gone Plaid (Instructables Can Be Confusable) > stuckMTB
06/14/2020 at 15:25

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Have fun and good luck. Mid-Ohio is a fantastic track. The back half is impossible to run through perfectly. I had loads of fun on my day there. 


Kinja'd!!! stuckMTB > ADabOfOppo; Gone Plaid (Instructables Can Be Confusable)
06/14/2020 at 15:43

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It’s a bit more expensive than the other events I do, and have to take a Monday off to do it because their weekends are always stacked with events, but every time I go I have an absolute blast there. The back straight with the kink, the esses, the front straight up through keyhole, the entire track is just glorious. Worth  it every time!


Kinja'd!!! Danny Korecki > stuckMTB
06/14/2020 at 23:28

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Random inquiry, I noticed the track decals on the window.

All tracks the car has been to? or that you have been to?

Not ripping you either way, I just wonder people’s preference. Some people only put the decals the actual car has been on and like all the tracks they have done go on a helmet or toolbox etc.


Kinja'd!!! stuckMTB > Danny Korecki
06/16/2020 at 08:54

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All the ones I’ve been on with that car. I had a few more on my Mini, but I’ve been slowly working my way back to those since I got my Vette.