Brownsquare
Junior Member
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2021
- Posts
- 19
- Reaction score
- 6
- Location
- Wayland, Michigan
- First Name
- Marc
- Truck Year
- 1987
- Truck Model
- R1500
- Engine Size
- 4.3 V6
Is there a way to determine by VIN which rear brakes my truck has? For reference it's an '87 GMC Sierra 1500. It's a 2wd long box base model with a 4.3 V6 and a three-speed Saginaw manual trans. I can't seem to get the correct parts to finish this never-ending rear brake job. When I took the rears apart, the passenger side was stuck so hard it took me an hour to wrestle the drum off. Once it did come off the adjuster was cranked DOWN all the way and yet the shoes were still tight to the drum. The hardware and shoes appeared relatively new, and the rear drums had almost no wear, so I assumed somebody had put brakes on it recently but may have installed the wrong parts.
I went down to the local auto parts store and bought all new stuff except drums. Went back to install it and the drum still wouldn't fit, even with the adjuster turned down all the way. I went back to the parts store and was told there were two different brake types. 11" diameter and 11 5/32" My drums measured 11" so I should have had the correct parts. Even with the emergency brake cable tension taken off completely, I still couldn't get the drums on with the adjuster turned all the way down.
Frustrated, I went back to the parts store thinking maybe a previous owner installed 11" when the truck should have had 11 5/32", so I bought all stuff for 11 5/32" (including drums this time) and went home to install it. The good news was with the 11 5/32" shoes on, the drum fit nicely! The only problem was, that drum and shoes was almost twice the width of the 11". When I slid the 11 5/32" drum over the brakes, it bottomed out against the backing plate before it even reached the lug studs.
I feel like I've tried every combination of parts to get where I want to go, but nothing is working. To further confuse things, a friend who used to work in parts at the local Chev dealer told me it wasn't uncommon to have to machine down new drums to make new brakes fit! In all my years of brake jobs I've never heard that before.
Any suggestions? This is frustrating the heck out of me!
I went down to the local auto parts store and bought all new stuff except drums. Went back to install it and the drum still wouldn't fit, even with the adjuster turned down all the way. I went back to the parts store and was told there were two different brake types. 11" diameter and 11 5/32" My drums measured 11" so I should have had the correct parts. Even with the emergency brake cable tension taken off completely, I still couldn't get the drums on with the adjuster turned all the way down.
Frustrated, I went back to the parts store thinking maybe a previous owner installed 11" when the truck should have had 11 5/32", so I bought all stuff for 11 5/32" (including drums this time) and went home to install it. The good news was with the 11 5/32" shoes on, the drum fit nicely! The only problem was, that drum and shoes was almost twice the width of the 11". When I slid the 11 5/32" drum over the brakes, it bottomed out against the backing plate before it even reached the lug studs.
I feel like I've tried every combination of parts to get where I want to go, but nothing is working. To further confuse things, a friend who used to work in parts at the local Chev dealer told me it wasn't uncommon to have to machine down new drums to make new brakes fit! In all my years of brake jobs I've never heard that before.
Any suggestions? This is frustrating the heck out of me!