I have found rear drums to cause brake judder if they have been dropped or hit in the wrong place this was on a corsa c after new rear shoes and drums were fitted
I have found rear drums to cause brake judder if they have been dropped or hit in the wrong place this was on a corsa c after new rear shoes and drums were fitted
Thanks, I've ordered two rear drums so fingers crossed.
Don't forget you'll need new bearings as well.
I have fitted new shoes, drums and bearings on the back, left the self adjusters at minimum. They haven't self adjusted so I'll need to do that manually however, there is still judder under hard braking so it can't be the rear as presently there is almost no brakes at the rear.
For the front I have replaced the discs, the pads are just about a year old and I couldn't find any slack mounting so I am totally puzzled. I also can't see or feel any uneveness/lumps in the tyres.
looking back through the thread just a couple of things I would do now.
bleed the whole braking system for any air and possibly upgrade your fluid?? You said you overhauled a rear cylinder and this is when your problems started......to me I would check and double check the fluid system again...perhaps the cylinder is no good or both rear cylinders need changing?
also, have you tried the rear tyres on the fronts just to eliminate any tyre issue you may have, although I find this unlikely, just another thing to try.
That will be tonights job!