How To Install Disc Brake Anti Rattle Clips Brakes

Posted By admin On 17/03/18

Hillcountryflt wrote:Thanks ultra-ranger. Boy did I have this wrong.

Front Disc Brake Anti-Rattle Clips - Part Number H5412 by Carlson. Say good bye to irritating brake noise with this premium set. Available in Department at CARiD.com. Front brakes anti-rattle clips. Disc brake design and was not a fluent mechanic either. The clips referenced in that article are the anti rattle shims on the.

How To Install Disc Brake Conversion

I've done quite a few '75-'80 Ford Granada/Mercury Monarch front disc brake swaps on early Mustangs. They have a very similar key, spring and anti-rattle clip arrangement as the Dentside F100/F150 front discs so, I'm pretty familiar with how they go together. Now that you know where the pieces go, it should be a lot less frustrating to finish out the assembly.

How To Install Disc Brake Anti Rattle Clips Brakes

Before you put the caliper on the anchor bracket, you need to coat the machined slides of the caliper so that the caliper will be free to move on the mounts as the pads wear down. If it's not lubricated, the caliper can stick/seize on the slides. However, don't use petroleum based lubricants. It can come off the slides and get on the dust boots of the calipers. This will deteriorate the boots. A very good product designed to use for this is Sil-Glyde. Its silicone based.

You can get it at NAPA.

Hillcountryflt wrote:Thanks ultra-ranger. Boy did I have this wrong. I've done quite a few '75-'80 Ford Granada/Mercury Monarch front disc brake swaps on early Mustangs. They have a very similar key, spring and anti-rattle clip arrangement as the Dentside F100/F150 front discs so, I'm pretty familiar with how they go together. Now that you know where the pieces go, it should be a lot less frustrating to finish out the assembly. Before you put the caliper on the anchor bracket, you need to coat the machined slides of the caliper so that the caliper will be free to move on the mounts as the pads wear down. If it's not lubricated, the caliper can stick/seize on the slides.

However, don't use petroleum based lubricants. It can come off the slides and get on the dust boots of the calipers. This will deteriorate the boots. A very good product designed to use for this is Sil-Glyde. Iisus Din Nazaret Film Torent there. Its silicone based.

You can get it at NAPA.