AutoBanter

AutoBanter (http://www.autobanter.com/index.php)
-   VW water cooled (http://www.autobanter.com/forumdisplay.php?f=18)
-   -   Leaking CV boot and noisy brakes (http://www.autobanter.com/showthread.php?t=35327)

toller June 13th 05 06:23 PM

Leaking CV boot and noisy brakes
 
Concerning a 2000 golf with 70,000 miles

1) I took my car in for #2 below the mechanic said I had a small hole in an
inner CV boot. He figured it would probably take a few thousand miles to
leak to the point of being a problem, and it was fine to replace it then.

Does this make sense?

2) Last Friday I started having an intermittent rubbing/grinding noise from
the right front wheel. On Saturday it got so loud, for about 30 seconds,
that my 11 year old was concerned. It seemed to stop when I touched the
brakes.
The mechanic found a right REAR brake pad had worn at a decided angle, and
was worn to the metal on one side and damaged the rotor. The other three
pads were worn, but had plenty of miles left in them.
He did not know why it was like that; as the brakes seemed to work fine. He
thought that whatever the problem was, taking it apart had freed it up.

Does that make sense?

He recommended replacing all the pads and rotors. The pads come in sets of
4 and have to all be replaced at the same time. The rotors could be turned,
but he thought it was false economy to save $50.

Is this correct?

The noise is gone; but my son and I were sure it was the front wheel, not
the rear.

Are noises like that deceptive enough to fool us, or was it unrelated to
the brake pad?

Thanks; just wanting to ascertain how good a shop I am using.



Tom's VR6 June 13th 05 06:55 PM

In rec.autos.makers.vw.watercooled, toller wrote:

>
>
>He recommended replacing all the pads and rotors. The pads come in sets of
>4 and have to all be replaced at the same time. The rotors could be turned,
>but he thought it was false economy to save $50.
>
> Is this correct?


$50 is low number for the difference IMHO.

I think your rear rotor is part of the hub, into which the wheel
bearings are pressed. I could not see replacing that hub without
replacing the wheel bearings. I guess that is possible.

If he attempts to turn the rear rotor with the bearings in place,
the wheel bearings would be exposed to possibly picking up dirt and
material from the turning process.

Perhaps he is factoring that in. If the rotor is bad, I would
replace rotors and bearings.



Woodchuck June 14th 05 02:56 AM

Sounds all honest to me!

"toller" > wrote in message
...
> Concerning a 2000 golf with 70,000 miles
>
> 1) I took my car in for #2 below the mechanic said I had a small hole in
> an inner CV boot. He figured it would probably take a few thousand miles
> to leak to the point of being a problem, and it was fine to replace it
> then.
>
> Does this make sense?
>
> 2) Last Friday I started having an intermittent rubbing/grinding noise
> from the right front wheel. On Saturday it got so loud, for about 30
> seconds, that my 11 year old was concerned. It seemed to stop when I
> touched the brakes.
> The mechanic found a right REAR brake pad had worn at a decided angle, and
> was worn to the metal on one side and damaged the rotor. The other three
> pads were worn, but had plenty of miles left in them.
> He did not know why it was like that; as the brakes seemed to work fine.
> He thought that whatever the problem was, taking it apart had freed it up.
>
> Does that make sense?
>
> He recommended replacing all the pads and rotors. The pads come in sets
> of 4 and have to all be replaced at the same time. The rotors could be
> turned, but he thought it was false economy to save $50.
>
> Is this correct?
>
> The noise is gone; but my son and I were sure it was the front wheel, not
> the rear.
>
> Are noises like that deceptive enough to fool us, or was it unrelated
> to the brake pad?
>
> Thanks; just wanting to ascertain how good a shop I am using.
>





All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:51 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
AutoBanter.com