Just curious if this is a sound line of thought.
05 Chevy Colorado 4wd
Said it was making a grinding noise on LF wheel. Pull wheel to find dried out(but not stuck) sliders and no, I repeat NO, caliper bolts. I did the brakes on this vehicle a few months ago. They only noticed the noise recently, so I'm near certain I did not leave the bolts out. And I greased the sliders too.
I also notice that that hub and rotor etc is all way hotter than the other side. Like the other side is cold, and the side in question is too hot to touch. Even the alloy wheel is pretty hot.
There is no noticeable play in the bearing. A TINY bit of on-road noise, but not bad at all.
Is it possible that the bearing is dried out, and that heat cycling + vibes loosened the caliper bolts? I also noticed that the rubber boot on one of the sliders was so soft and fragile that when I tried to take it off to transfer it to the new one, it fell apart. To me saying it's getting REALLY hot and breaking down.
Opinions?
05 Chevy Colorado 4wd
Said it was making a grinding noise on LF wheel. Pull wheel to find dried out(but not stuck) sliders and no, I repeat NO, caliper bolts. I did the brakes on this vehicle a few months ago. They only noticed the noise recently, so I'm near certain I did not leave the bolts out. And I greased the sliders too.
I also notice that that hub and rotor etc is all way hotter than the other side. Like the other side is cold, and the side in question is too hot to touch. Even the alloy wheel is pretty hot.
There is no noticeable play in the bearing. A TINY bit of on-road noise, but not bad at all.
Is it possible that the bearing is dried out, and that heat cycling + vibes loosened the caliper bolts? I also noticed that the rubber boot on one of the sliders was so soft and fragile that when I tried to take it off to transfer it to the new one, it fell apart. To me saying it's getting REALLY hot and breaking down.
Opinions?
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