CWOLAW
Member
I just replaced my front and rear Calipers, Rotors, Pads, and the front flexible brake line hoses, on my 1998 Expedition 4WD 5.4L. Question - After bleeding the brakes, it still feels "soft" and the pedal travels a bit before firming up. I bled the lines again, and didn't appear to have any air coming out.
My Question. I noted when installing the new calipers, the front calipers have the bleeder valve up towards the top of the calipers, but the rear calipers appear to have the bleeder valve on the low side of the caliper. Is this right? Each were clearly marked Passenger and Driver side. But since air rises, I'm wondering if the calipers were in the appropriate box and I might have air trapped in the top of the rear caliper? Is it even possible to install the calipers on the wrong side?
Since I removed the calipers to return them for the core charge, when purchasing the new (rebuilt) calipers, I didn't have a "reference" nor could I recall were the bleeder valve position was on the removed calipers.
I can't even seem to find a PIC of the rear installed calipers to ensure they are not on the wrong side of the vehicle. Can anyone provide me some guidance?
My Question. I noted when installing the new calipers, the front calipers have the bleeder valve up towards the top of the calipers, but the rear calipers appear to have the bleeder valve on the low side of the caliper. Is this right? Each were clearly marked Passenger and Driver side. But since air rises, I'm wondering if the calipers were in the appropriate box and I might have air trapped in the top of the rear caliper? Is it even possible to install the calipers on the wrong side?
Since I removed the calipers to return them for the core charge, when purchasing the new (rebuilt) calipers, I didn't have a "reference" nor could I recall were the bleeder valve position was on the removed calipers.
I can't even seem to find a PIC of the rear installed calipers to ensure they are not on the wrong side of the vehicle. Can anyone provide me some guidance?