We found a signal tonight at our campsite further north of Del Rio, so with the help of my Wilson Antenna Booster, we are able to get on line!
With all the great help from our Safari group friends, and Ralph Andrews who knows these rigs inside and out... we were able to do a brake job, while on the road!
Steve got some of the lug nuts loose while at the campsite, but decided to drive the whole motorhome into Del Rio to a tire place to get the rest loosened. They kindly offered their empty back lot to park in to do the work! The nice guy named Travistino (sp?) came around back with his service truck and loosened up the last few lug nuts for us. Look at this Big Boy Tool!
The charge??? $5.00.... yes.... $5.00! (I gave him a $10 tip and said to buy lunch)
Then we went to work. First we had to jack up the motorhome on the front leveling jack till the tires cleared the ground. We stacked up heavy wooden planks under the axle in case the front jack gave way. Never hurts to be safe. Then Steve was able to remove the driver's side tire and get to the brake system.
Steve said to note in the picture on the left, his reinforced top of the shock absorber mount that he repaired after it broke last summer. He super duper welded it and made it even better than before. Steve noticed in New Orleans on Eric's rig, his has been repaired too. So it must be a common problem on Safari's with the Velvet Ride?
OH MY>>>> LOOK AT THESE!
Guess we needed new brake pads, eh?
Once he got the brake pads out, he took them with him. He hopped in the Tracker and went over to NAPA on the north side of Del Rio where our new ones had come in on the truck an hour before. Amazing--- we ordered them at 4pm yesterday and they were on a truck ready for us to be picked up by 8am the next morning. What good service!
Here is the part number that NAPA used after cross referencing the numbers we got from Mel, John and Ralph. Steve was told the pads are actually the ones made by Bendix for the Ford Truck braking systems. That is good to know too.
Out came the rest of his tools and he set to work. It was fairly warm in the low 70's so his brown overalls were needed for protection while he worked, but soon got hot in the sunshine.
Before reassembling any of the brake parts, he used the generator to power up his grinding tool. The wire cup brush took off any excess rust and cleaned up all the parts nicely.
I was the gopher and the wheel turner and the tool hander and the picture taker!
Then he dabbed the brush of Copper Never Sieze on each piece that needed it, including the keeper pins (if that is their name?)
When assembling the caliper unit back together, you have to be sure to get these two metal discs in the right place inside of the cups before setting the pad into place. You need three or even four hands to do this, especially if you keep the brake line attached like Steve did.
Now.... he did the same thing to the passenger side as the driver's side... both front brakes were serviced. What a job! In a parking lot in a desert city with all his tools on board. What a guy! See why I keep him around?
It was time to put the tires back on, and lower the jack a bit till the tires were snug to the ground.
Bit by bit, he tightened up the lug nuts with the torque ratchet to 170 ft pound as high as it will go. After we drove it around to the front, the nice guy Travistino tightened them up to spec 500 ft pounds with his torque bar on air ratchet. Steve estimates it was about a two hour job to do both front brakes. We saved a LOT of money by doing it ourselves.
Now my job was to bring the man a nice cold glass of lemonade!
I ran a shipment out to the post office of the things I sell (I tell ya, my work never takes a vacation) and then I ran the poor Tracker through a car wash and picked up a can of freon for the Tracker air conditioning system. It needed a recharge, so Steve took care of that before we left the lot.
Once back on the road, I raced ahead of him, going north on Hwy 90 in the Tracker while he followed slower and stopped for a fuel up... $3.99 a gallon to top off the tank with only 25 gallons. As we head further west, we don't want to be stuck being too low on fuel. I drove up past the visitor center to the northern part of Amistad National Park Recreation Area to the furthest north campground of the park. I went ahead to make sure it was on a good road and a good campsite was available. I called back to Steve on the cell phone as he drove north and gave him the go-ahead to keep coming.
And..... The brakes work just fine! Wheeeeeee
I will post more pics of the great campsite we have in the desert and our cool new Australian neighbors in tomorrow's blog. This one is getting tooooo long!
Wow, good job Stevio and photographer!
ReplyDeleteexcellent job...good to have that behind you I'm sure...
ReplyDeleteA job well done!! How many miles where on the old pads?
ReplyDeleteWe bought the rig 6 years ago with 22,000 miles on it. We never changed the pads, and now have about 60,000 miles or so?
DeleteWow, awesome job Stevio! And you were a good helper too :-) Imagine that. fixing your own brakes just at the perfect place to do so. I'm impressed!
ReplyDeleteIt's so nice to have a man around the house...oops, motorhome! Karen, you make a great reporter!
ReplyDeleteGreat job Steveo, but you had a good gofer too. After seeing your rig I knew you would have the everything needed on board. I had to put a speedometer gear on the back of my tow vehicle on our very first RV trip years ago, We were crossing the Painted desert and stopped at a Native American McDonalds at a crossroads.Since I did't have a hydraulic jack with me,(Now I have two) the owner let be put the right wheels up on a 5 inch curb so I could get the drive shaft and rear cone off to replace the gear.That's with the trailer still attached. Wouldn't do that again.Be safe out there. Sam & Donna...
ReplyDeleteGood job on the parking lot brake job. Our coach has more miles than yours and when we had the brakes inspected last week, we had new looking shoes. I'm guessing ours had been replaced recently...before we bought it. Good to see what 60,000 miles of wear looks like!
ReplyDeleteThat Steve is sure handy, great job!
ReplyDeleteThumbs up to both of you!
ReplyDeleteDo you think your pads where that bad at 60k because your PacBrake hadn't worked for a long time?
My pads are original at 130k miles, (the left front was changed at 92k because one pad de-laminated),
I suppose mine are about done for.....what is Steve's hourly rate again???? lol
Stay warm
Mel
Steve's rate is "a hunnerd bucks n hour" dontcha know????
DeleteAnother job done correctly, the Anti-seize compound is the best thing to keep the caliper moving freely. Well done!
ReplyDeleteAnd all this for just a glass of lemonaide? Steveio does work cheap... ;c)
I wish I had half the talent Steve has...is there ANYTHING that guy can't fix?
ReplyDeleteGreat job as always. Some people would have let it ruin their trip but you guys just pull it together and keep on trucking.
ReplyDeleteWhenever problems occur, the opportunity is alays there to resolve them. Based on attitude towards resolving it.
DeleteWorst I ever encountered was changing a clutch in a 4X4 six speed tranny in a motel parking lot on a labor day weekend in Eli, Nevada, luckily there was a ford garage in town, closed for the holiday but they had all the parts which I purchased on Friday. If I waited on them tuesday or wednesday was the earliest they could take me in, On monday morning I was ready and on the road to Maine. This was on a truck I bought 4 days before leaving CA.
Dagnabit! Karen, wish we had known you were in the area. Our cell service has been down two days and I had no idea you guys were in S TEXAS. WE are 60 miles south of San Antonio working at a drilling site and would have loved to meet you guys in person. Have fun and if you come back this way holler on Facebook and y'all can come by and check out our spot.
ReplyDeleteCharlie and Peggy