▶What are the wear limits for brake pads and rotors?
Brake pads are typically replaced when friction material thickness drops below ¼ inch (about 6mm). Most pads have a wear indicator (small metal tab) that scrapes the rotor when pads are worn, making noise and alerting the driver. Rotors are replaced when thickness drops below the minimum specification (usually ⅜ to ½ inch, depending on vehicle), measured with a micrometer on the friction surface. Rotors are also checked for runout (wobble) and parallelism (thickness variation across the surface); if runout exceeds 0.005 inches or parallelism exceeds 0.0005 inches, replacement is needed. Many shops resurface rotors to save cost, but turned rotors can overheat in heavy braking; replacement is often safer and only marginally more expensive.
▶How do I bleed brakes to remove air from the hydraulic system?
Air in the brake lines creates a spongy brake pedal because air compresses under pressure (unlike fluid). Bleeding removes air. Methods: (1) Manual bleeding: one person inside the car slowly presses and releases the brake pedal while a second person opens and closes the bleeder screw (a small valve on the caliper) in a sequence (usually RR, LR, RF, LF), watching for air bubbles to stop. (2) Vacuum bleeder: a powered pump sucks fluid and air out of each caliper. (3) Pressure bleeder: a pressurized tank forces fluid through the system. Always keep the master cylinder reservoir filled with fresh brake fluid; running dry introduces air. Bleed brakes after any hydraulic work (pad change, caliper replacement, line repair).
▶What is the difference between disc brakes and drum brakes?
Disc brakes (front most cars, rear some) use a rotor spinning with the wheel and friction pads pressed against it by a caliper, similar to a bicycle brake. They cool easily, resist fade, and are good at high speeds. Drum brakes (older, some rear) use a cylindrical drum and curved brake shoes expanding inside it. They cool poorly, fade under hard braking, but are cheaper and simpler. Most modern cars use disc brakes front and rear. Drum brakes require adjustment as shoes wear; discs self-adjust via the floating caliper. Service procedures differ: disc requires pad and rotor replacement; drum requires shoe and wheel cylinder work.
▶What is brake fluid and why does it need changing?
Brake fluid is a hydraulic oil that transmits pedal pressure to the brake components. It must be incompressible (so braking feels solid, not spongy), have high boiling point (so it doesn't boil under heat and lose pressure), and resist moisture (water in brake fluid lowers boiling point and corrodes components). Modern fluids are DOT 3, DOT 4, or DOT 5.1 (number indicates boiling point and specifications). Over time, fluid absorbs moisture from the air (hygroscopic), so it should be flushed every 1-2 years to prevent corrosion and boiling. Old fluid (dark brown, cloudy) is a sign of moisture and contamination; flushing restores braking performance and prevents premature caliper or master cylinder failure.
▶What is brake fade and when does it occur?
Brake fade is loss of braking power due to excessive heat. The brake fluid boils (loses viscosity), pads overheat and glaze (surface hardens and loses grip), or the rotor or drum warps. Causes: downhill driving with continuous braking, towing a heavy load, or driving a worn-out vehicle with poor brakes. Prevention: proper pad and rotor quality, fluid flushing to maintain boiling point, and not carrying excessive weight. Towing a trailer requires trailer brakes (hydraulic or electric) to reduce load on the car's brakes. If fade occurs during driving, pump the brakes gently (bringing pedal pressure to recover grip) or downshift to engine braking, then get the vehicle cooled before continued braking.
▶What is the parking brake and how is it serviced?
The parking brake (emergency brake, e-brake, hand brake) is a separate system using cable-actuated friction pads or a hydraulic caliper to hold the vehicle stationary. It should hold a parked car on a steep hill. If loose, adjust the cable (tighten the adjuster nut on the cable or at the pedal, depending on type) or replace pads/friction material. On modern cars with electric parking brakes, a motor engages the brake; if it fails to hold or engage, the electric actuator or control module needs diagnosis and repair. Test the parking brake on a slope to ensure it holds; a car rolling when parked is a safety issue.
▶What are the dangers of working on brakes and how do I stay safe?
Brake dust (from worn pads) contains asbestos in older vehicles. Inhaling asbestos causes mesothelioma and lung cancer. Always wear a dust mask (N95 minimum, P100 better) and use wet cleaning (spray with brake cleaner before disturbing dust) rather than air pressure (which aerosolizes asbestos). Brake fluid is toxic and caustic; wear gloves and avoid skin contact. Never allow brake fluid on paint; it dissolves clear coat. Working on brakes under the car: use jack stands (never rely on a jack alone—jacks fail and people die). Brake systems are safety-critical: incorrect work can cause brake failure and accidents. Double-check your work: spin the wheel (does it rotate freely, no rubbing?), press the brake pedal (does it feel firm, not spongy?), and test-drive gently before returning the car.