Woodslasher
Teh debil
- Local time
- 6:07 AM
- User ID
- 15993
- Joined
- Mar 18, 2021
- Messages
- 3,421
- Reaction score
- 13,827
- Location
- Commiefornia
@Nate. knows a bit of the story, but the short(er) version is I swapped out my slightly leaky original hydroboost for a Cardone reman one. I made it maybe 1/4 mile to a neighbor's and partially back before my brakes seized. After a quick look I determined my master was overfilled, my fault for topping it off after pumping up the brakes and pulling the booster. So, I drained it a bit, bled the brakes and all was good again.
This morning I went to actually road test the truck by driving it to work, since it's my DD. First mile or so felt fine, then it started feeling slightly sticky. I decided I'd turn around, dump it at the house, and figure it out later. Right after I got headed towards home it started getting really sticky. Now, there are no turnouts for another 1/4 mile at least and the road has no shoulders and is full of blind corners, so I just kept going. I finally hit a turnout, pulled over, and my brakes immediately caught fire. No real damage was done to major components and the truck made it home, but now I get to do calipers, pads, rotors, wheel bearings, and brake lines again! After talking with a Dodge shop, I learned similar booster issues are incredibly common on 90' and early 2000's Dodges.
This morning I went to actually road test the truck by driving it to work, since it's my DD. First mile or so felt fine, then it started feeling slightly sticky. I decided I'd turn around, dump it at the house, and figure it out later. Right after I got headed towards home it started getting really sticky. Now, there are no turnouts for another 1/4 mile at least and the road has no shoulders and is full of blind corners, so I just kept going. I finally hit a turnout, pulled over, and my brakes immediately caught fire. No real damage was done to major components and the truck made it home, but now I get to do calipers, pads, rotors, wheel bearings, and brake lines again! After talking with a Dodge shop, I learned similar booster issues are incredibly common on 90' and early 2000's Dodges.
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