jcmseven
Veteran Member
Fellow Posters,
A quick question for the group. I started to hear rumblings from the brakes on my 2002 Ford F250 diesel last week. I took the truck into a local brake shop (not the dealer) and asked them to check it out. The answer: front brake pad worn and disc on left needed to be turned. Received truck back, still has problem. Took truck to dealer (my original choice, but they were backed up several days) and mechanic said the front brakes are fine, and he doubted ever were the problem. Back brakes, however, were worn and the rotors had to be replaced also. Total cost: $415.00 for all work. My question: is there any particular reason a truck with 64,000 miles on it and in really great shape (babied) should wear the rear brakes faster than the front??? I have never seen this before.
John M
A quick question for the group. I started to hear rumblings from the brakes on my 2002 Ford F250 diesel last week. I took the truck into a local brake shop (not the dealer) and asked them to check it out. The answer: front brake pad worn and disc on left needed to be turned. Received truck back, still has problem. Took truck to dealer (my original choice, but they were backed up several days) and mechanic said the front brakes are fine, and he doubted ever were the problem. Back brakes, however, were worn and the rotors had to be replaced also. Total cost: $415.00 for all work. My question: is there any particular reason a truck with 64,000 miles on it and in really great shape (babied) should wear the rear brakes faster than the front??? I have never seen this before.
John M