Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
Fellers, I have a mystery on my hands. Any brake wizards out there to help solve it? I have spent hours looking at posts here with no solution.
For years, my 72 K10's brakes have worked well, quietly, no issues. Last fall the right rear drum brake began squealing loudly when applied at mid-pressure. Light or hard applications don't provoke the squeal. It is clearly a cyclical sound at very slow speeds, so it seems obviously related to the rotation of the drum. 1) I pulled both drums off - pads were old but still had life. Steel wooled the drums, sanded the pads - the squeal persisted. 2) Looked for cylinder leaks, they were dry. Inspected the drums for signs of some contact with anything other than the pads. Nothing. Inspected the backing plates, pads, all hardware for signs of abnormal contact. Nothing, nothing at all. 3) The drums are different, someone replaced one or both in the last 52 years, but they ended up slightly different. Swapped the drums left to right. Squeal remains, BUT STILL ON THE RIGHT SIDE. 4) Installed new pads and hardware (both sides). Squeal remains. 5) Had both drums turned. Squeal remains. I am well and thoroughly stumped. I have a single-side brake squeal that persists through pad and hardware changes, L-to-R drum swaps, and drum resurfacing. There is no cyclical friction wear pattern on any part beyond the braking surfaces themselves. Clearly the brake is still operating - if it weren't, the squeal would be constant or not at all. The brakes were quiet for years and nothing has visibly changed. Next step I can try is new drums altogether, but that feels like throwing money at the problem and I can't see how that would be different than the freshly-turned drums I have. Only other thing I can even imagine is pretty out there - wheel bearing with just enough play that brake application changes wheel alignment enough to create some sort of squeal on that side. (???) But in this respect both wheels feel about the same. What am I missing? Starting to feel insane on this one. |
Re: Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
Sorry no wizard here, but I'm sure you'll get one.
Did you inspect the backing plate areas where the shoes make contact? ...and did you add grease? What about adding grease to the anchor pin? ...was there any wear on the anchor pin? Did you compare both sides to each other? ...like the backing plate wear, and the axle play? Could you feel excessive play in the axle? What about the oil level in the differential? Could that have caused your bearings to go dry? After 52 years, maybe it's time for new axles or new bearing surface welded on and machined. Good luck! |
Re: Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
Yes, backing plate contact areas looked similar and normal, and yes, I greased them.
Cleaned and greased the anchor posts - no wear. Yes, compared sides for wear patterns and axle play - no appreciable differences. No excessive play in the axle that I could tell. Diff had good oil in it and has been full (I check periodically); at the same time as this brake job I did replace the gasket and refill with fresh gear oil (old gasket was beginning to seep). However the noise began months before gasket replacement and there's no change with fresh oil. |
Re: Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
Assuming leaf springs, have you looked at the spring packs?
Or the u-bolts and spring eye bushings. |
Re: Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
You might check to see if the axles are running straight and true. A wobble of the drum caused by a bent axle or a drum that's not running true will cause the brake components to move around on the backing plate with every revolution.
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Re: Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
a squeal is usually a sign of a bad wheel bearing...in my experience anyway.
I can't think of a drum brake component that would cause a squealing noise that usually has a dragging/grinding noise. Is it only when you apply the brakes? |
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I would expect a dragging/grinding noise from metal on metal. Maybe I'll have to get a video with the squeal so you all can hear what I'm talking about. |
Re: Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
I appreciate the replies so far - I'll pull the drums off again and doublecheck axles, bearings, and suspension components.
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Re: Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
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Loose u-bolts. Missing anti rattle clips. The liner between leafs missing. |
Re: Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
I had this on an Astrovan and tried what you have done. Try swapping shoes side to side; if that doesn't work put on new shoes.
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Re: Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
>> if I ease up on the pedal from a complete stop so that the truck inches forward, I can get a "stutter-squeal<<
Are you absolutely sure the sound is coming from the rear? Have you had someone in the pass seat verify, with window up/down, the sound is from the rear? Easing up on the pedal at a stop may be allowing the metering valve to hold back the pressure to the front disc brakes allowing the front rotors to roll slightly until the rear can take complete control of braking. The Metering valve in the combination valve may have a threshold pressure of 50-80 psi., depending on combination valve specs Any pressure below that means only the rear brakes will be engaged. |
Re: Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
I'm sure you probably checked for this but is there any chance the outer lip of the backing plate is rubbing on the drum? I had one that was bent at the edge and it made a high pitched squealing noise.
Good luck, Rg |
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Re: Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
Strange idea, you could open the rear end and trade the axles side to side. Not sure what that would tell you though...
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Re: Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
If you're going to pull the axles out to do that might as well replace the bearings and seals and see what happens. They are inexpensive. I got a recommendation from someone here to get the premium NAPA brand. NAPA had their economy bearings in stock but I asked them to order the premium ones and they were at the store in a couple days. Car parts stores loan the bearing puller and slide hammer needed to do the job. When trying to remove the axles you may run into the problem of broken differential pinion shaft lock bolt. Don't let it alarm you too much, if I can replace that I bet anybody could, it does take patience.
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Re: Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
Loose shoe rivet/s
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Re: Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
Put a big load on the suspension and rear end on that side.
3 to 500 lbs should do it. Sand bags work for that. |
Re: Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
When stumped I always jack the rig up on jack stands, all 4 wheels.
Then with someone driving I have them load up the brakes while the transmission is in gear and rolling. Try it at different speeds and with and without the hubs in and with and without the transfer case in gear. I have had good luck with this method. Another trick is to have some one drive in circles with you in the middle. Do this in both directions. Hope it works for you as well as it did for me. Cheers |
Re: Brake wizards needed - I'm about to go nuts!
Pulled everything back apart yesterday. Looked the suspension over thoroughly, all looks normal. Wheel bearings had the slightest amount of vertical play, so I pulled the axle shafts and the bearings. They looked quite good, actually - I bet someone did these in the last 20,000 miles (I've put about 12,000 miles on the truck over the last decade). But I figured, why not replace them since I had it apart anyway. While ordering bearings and seals I went ahead and ordered new drums as well. Not that expensive, the old ones are getting thin, and I'm ready to stop taking things apart repeatedly :lol:
Guess we'll see what the results are once it's all back together next weekend. Thanks to everyone who's tried to help. |
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