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Front brake rotor tapped removal holes bolt size?


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5 hours ago, 16LT4 said:

Put the caliper and wheel back on, install the lug nuts until  they contact the wheel, then back them off 0/5-1 turn.  Hop in the truck, put in gear, roll a few feet forward, and stab the brakes.  Repeat in reverse.  Jack up, remove wheel, remove caliper/bracket, and catch rotor as it falls off.  As strong as one may be, a 6000 lb. Silverado is stronger.

 

The same process is used to free aluminum wheels that have galvanically attached themselves to steel hubs, and works every time.  I do something similar to free driveshafts that have frozen in place on pinion yokes.

Thanks!  I'll definitely have to try this.

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On 1/18/2023 at 5:32 PM, Outdoors_Guy_88 said:

Thanks!  I'll definitely have to try this.

 

You might have to play around with how loose to make the lugs; you only need a few thousandths of an inch of play to break the rust seal.  A wire wheel on a a $10 HF angle grinder makes light work of cleaning up the hub .

 

I'm also in upstate NY, so most of what I touch has some various stage of rot or corrosion.  A 6k lb Silverado is the biggest BFH you can swing at it. :)

 

This is what you want on reassembly on most every fastener, the back face of the rotor, the rotor bore, the hub, etc.

 

https://www.motorcraft.com/us/en_us/home/our-products/chemicals-and-lubricants/greases/high-temperature-nickel-anti-seize-lubricants.html

Edited by 16LT4
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