PrairieDrifter
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Dec 28, 2014
- Posts
- 3,877
- Reaction score
- 5,710
- Location
- North Dakota
- First Name
- Mason
- Truck Year
- 84,79,77,76,70,48
- Truck Model
- Suburban k10, bonanza k10, k30, k20, c10, gmc 1/2ton
- Engine Size
- 350, 350, 350, 350, 350, 350
I'd just be worried about it giving me a false positive. Since everything is heating up, I'm assuming the brake fluid would heat up in the wheel cylinder and push out fluid regardless. The fact that I adjusted the brakes off, and only lightly touched the brakes twice then drove ten miles of highway, and they still got hot. Tells me it's not a hydraulic or input problem.Right and unfortunately none of us are there with you. So we throw out our best advice.
Why don't you drive the truck until the brakes are dragging good. Reach under the truck and crack the bleeders for both the rear drums. If it's hydraulic issue there should be a good spirt of fluid and the brakes should free up. If it's mechanical inside the drum then they'll still be dragging and locked up.
Again not saying anything isn't possible, but i don't want to throw a third set of brakes on it just in hope that it'll work. If I can't get quality replacement parts from parts store then what's the point, thats one of the reasons I love squares. I can go anywhere in America and I'll have parts availability. I'd rather not go aftermarket but, by the time i do another set of brakes(would be the third), i would probably be 3/4 of the money into it, as a disc conversion. Now that I've done a master and am considering doing the booster.
As well as I've heard nothing but bad things about the replacement proportioning valves. They leak right away or within 3-5 years, and who knows in how many miles. But I daily this truck, in ND, it probably won't last for me with my luck.