I always use the parking brake and always have on all vehicles and do have salt and have never had issues. Hummmmm ponderous.
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reffug said:I always use the parking brake and always have on all vehicles and do have salt and have never had issues. Hummmmm ponderous.
landtank said:Every Toyota truck that I've owned for any length of time has seized the bellcranks.
elmariachi said:FWIW, let me tell you how this happened to me twice on two of my 6 FJ-80s. The first time was in the winter of 1995 in my 1991 FJ-80 and I was en route to Virginia for Christmas. We were on the interstate in 45 degree weather and I had been running for about 2 hours at road speed, no stops whatsoever. I came sailing off the highway onto the exit ramp and slammed on my brakes. I literally felt the rotors go from smooth to warped in a matter of three seconds. They were previously fine and not one issue and instantly they got so bad that it dramatically changed the way we drove throughout the balance of the trip. I replaced them within a week of arriving home.
Next instance was back here in Texas in my 1996 FJ-80, coming down the interstate again after a couple hours of solid running in 65 degree weather. I leaned hard on my brakes at road speed to get stopped to pick up something lying in the road. In the process of braking, I again felt the rotors go from A-OK to totally warped. It was so bad I replaced the rotors and pads the next weekend.
Background:
The idea behind brake spraying is rooted firmly in thermodynamics. As water changes phases from liquid to gas an enormous amount of heat energy is absorbed. We want to use the heat absorbing properties of the water to gas phase transformation to cool our brakes.
The idea is to get a fine mist of water into the cooling vanes inside our rotors. The fine mist will evaporate and cool the rotors as it travels through the vanes. We want to avoid a constant stream of water that may come in contact with our rotors and cause warpage. By spraying a fine mist we will ensure that we expose the maximum surface area of the water sprayed at the brakes giving us the best possible distribution and evaporation of the water. For this reason, nozzle choice and pump pressure are very important.....better atomization of the water will make the entire braking system work better.
Application:
Brake spraying can improve the cooling of ANY brake system that uses a vented rotor. Many of you probably saw the Tran-Am race this past weekend won by Bobby Archer. Those big heavy cars all use brake sprayers to assist cooling.
I would NOT suggest using this for any solid rotor. Spraying water on one side of a rotor can cause uneven pad wear, rotor warpage and other problems.
I have a 94 AWD Talon which is under braked from the factory. In the past I would have to have my rotors skimmed after every event due to warpage. Since installing brake sprayers, I have not had to skim the rotors one single time after four events (8 track days) despite using them much harder than I have in the past (because my brakes work better). I am buying an upgraded brake kit for my car in the near future (about two hours) and I will continue to use the sprayers.
Junk said:Gumby, don't know how you are missing the obvious.
They obviously use that special brake fluid additive that assures you get 50% more life out of the rotors. How did you not know that.![]()
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I'm just assuming that you ride the brake harder - ie. they drive more highway for extended periods - possibly during less crowded times - they don't have as much weight on their brakes (arb bars, sliders etc)
Gumby said:I have two customers with pulsating brakes issues. Both have been to others before me and both have had me install new fronts and turn the rears. In both cases the pulsating returned after a few months. In the one case I just repaired the rears were warped and non turnable. Replacing the rears solved the problem again.
I tried to figure out why I have 133K on my rotors and they are having problems after a few months. the calipers are releasing just fine. they are getting better life from their pads than I am, because I drive a lot of city miles with over size tires and heavy extra goodies, ( and a fat ass driver) . They are generally a LOT easier on their 80s than I am.
What do they do differently than I do? I noticed when I picked up her truck today.
i beleive the issue is caused by Chicago area weather and Toyota weird engineering.
Anybody got a guess?![]()
landtank said:The whole deposit thing for me is utter Bull****!!
Some a****** starts a web site that states that all pulsing problems are deposits on the rotors and a bunch of lemmings start jumping on the band wagon.