dodge man
Super Star Member
I just did a major rehab on my rear brakes. Its a 2004 Dodge Ram, 2500, 4x4 with the Cummins. I replaced the rotors, pads, calibers, and all the e-brake hardware and linings. After I got everything together, I bled the brakes, starting at the right rear, then the left rear. I didn't count, but I'm guessing the brake pedal was pumped 30 to 40 times for the right rear, and maybe 20 times on the left rear. I thought I had all the air out.
The good news, my e-brakes now work, they are a drum brake inside the rotors. All the old hardware was rusty and they never have worked since I got the truck.
The bad news, the brake pedal almost goes to the floor. Anyone that has done a set of disc brakes will experience the brakes not working well the first couple of times you use them after a brake job. This usually goes away after the first couple of stops. The problem is mine didn't get better, probably double the travel it should have. The pedal also returns very slow.
A couple of questions. What is the correct way to bleed brakes? Do you start at the farthest brake, the right rear, or the nearest brake to the master cylinder?
I didn't bleed the front brakes. I can't imagine they would have gotten any air in them. I only had the brake lines cracked for a minute while I swithced the calibers over. Do I need to bleed the fronts?
I assume I need to just bleed the brakes more, but does anybody have any other ideas? I'm going to pull the wheels when I bleed them tonight and have a look around and make sure there aren't any leaks.
The good news, my e-brakes now work, they are a drum brake inside the rotors. All the old hardware was rusty and they never have worked since I got the truck.
The bad news, the brake pedal almost goes to the floor. Anyone that has done a set of disc brakes will experience the brakes not working well the first couple of times you use them after a brake job. This usually goes away after the first couple of stops. The problem is mine didn't get better, probably double the travel it should have. The pedal also returns very slow.
A couple of questions. What is the correct way to bleed brakes? Do you start at the farthest brake, the right rear, or the nearest brake to the master cylinder?
I didn't bleed the front brakes. I can't imagine they would have gotten any air in them. I only had the brake lines cracked for a minute while I swithced the calibers over. Do I need to bleed the fronts?
I assume I need to just bleed the brakes more, but does anybody have any other ideas? I'm going to pull the wheels when I bleed them tonight and have a look around and make sure there aren't any leaks.