How To Replace the Back Brakes on a 1999 Chevy Truck
The importance of proper brake maintenance is obvious. If you allow your brakes to wear down far enough, it will damage your 1999 Chevy truc...
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The importance of proper brake maintenance is obvious. If you allow your brakes to wear down far enough, it will damage your 1999 Chevy truck's rotors, leading to costly repairs and possibly leaving you unable to stop the vehicle. The front brakes of a Chevy truck tend to wear out more often than the back brakes, but over time it will become necessary to replace the back brakes, also.
Instructions
- 1
Park your Chevy truck on level, solid pavement.
2Loosen the lug nuts on the wheel you intend to work on using a four-way or tire iron.
3Lift the back end of the truck by placing a floor jack under the rear differential and jacking it up.
4Remove the lug nuts.
5Pull the tire straight forward, remove it and set it aside.
6Remove the bolts on the back of the drum brake assembly using a wrench and a socket. There are four of them.
7Loosen the caliper pins, which are the outer set of bolts on the brake assembly, using a wrench and a ratchet.
8Remove the inner set of bolts from the back of the brake assembly.
9Pull the brake assembly out of the truck.
10Remove the caliper pins from the brake assembly and remove the caliper from the assembly frame.
11Putting a wooden block over the caliper piston, place a C-clamp with one end on the block and the other on the back of the caliper.
12Tighten the clamp until about 1/8 inch of the piston is sticking out of the housing.
13Place the arms of a drum puller around the edge of the rotor and screw the center bolt until it's resting against the axle hub.
14Use a wrench to turn the center bolt about a quarter turn.
15Attempt to pull the drum off of the axle. It may not come off due to rust buildup. If it refuses to slide off, tap around the outer edges of the drum with a hammer and turn the center bolt another quarter turn. Attempt to remove it once again. Repeat this process until the drum slides off.
16Disengage the springs holding the brake shoes in. Needle-nose pliers are ideal for this.
17Disengage the brake shoes from the caliper and pull them out entirely. This can be done by hand.
18Place the new brake shoes where the old ones came from, making sure to connect them to the caliper first. Engage the springs that hold them in.
19Put the new brake drum over the brake assembly and slide it onto the axle.
20Put the brake housing over the rotor and reinsert the bolts. If you did it correctly, there will be a brake pad on both sides of the rotor, with the pad portion of the brake shoes touching the rotor.
21Remove the C-clamp and the block of wood.
22Put the caliper over the brake housing and insert the caliper pins. Make sure to tighten them all the way.
23Slide the tire back on, replace the lug nuts and lower the truck back to the ground. Once you take the truck off the jack, double check to make sure all of the lug nuts are tightened fully.
24Repeat this process on the other wheel.