All the shops I know around here that were doing that kind of stuff no longer do. Or if they have the machine, no one knows how to use it.
That's really the problem. The ease of getting new rotors and drums has made turning them obsolete and a lost skill for sure. We had a top of the line Ammco (sp?) brake lathe in our shop that was probably every bit of 30 years old. My most senior tech that retired last fall was the only guy that I'd ever seen use it and even then that was a few years ago. We had to make space for new equipment in our tool room and we ended up moving out into a storage shed. It's sad because that was a top of the line piece of equipment when it was new and like many old setups still worked great when we put it away.All the shops I know around here that were doing that kind of stuff no longer do. Or if they have the machine, no one knows how to use it.
That's the point. With rotors and drums as cheap as they are now, it's not really worth it to go through turning. Even having a top of the line on car Pro-Cut brake lathe we rarely use it. It comes down to the cost. Our shop labor rate is $122/hr, average labor time to turn one rotor is a half-hour. Depending on the list price per rotor our labor to cut one can be more expensive.Eileen's 06 Malibu needs rear brakes. I ordered pads and rotors. AC Delco delivered for $78 from Rockauto. So why turn anything?
2 ACDelco drums are $65 from Summit. Seems pretty cheap.
Is this the axle in the truck? Its a 12bI have 12 cover bolts and it is not oval shaped at all.
View attachment 335239
Is this a 12 bolt axle? Or even a Dana 44? I've done numerous searches along the lines of "what rear axle 1973 C10" but nothing definitive comes up. Seems like the answers are for like newer than 1977 or older than 1970.
If I search for "5 lug 12 bolt axle" most results seem to be for axle shaft conversions from 6 to 5 lug for a 12 bolt.
Gonna do some more searching, but I'm curious if anyone has some insight.
Okay I'm confused about my rear axle. I thought I have a 10 bolt since it's 5 lug C10 truck. I thought it was probably an 8.2 since it doesn't have the square lugs at 5 & 7 o'clock in the casting.
View attachment 335240
The 8.2" 10 bolt is also identifiable by the use of an 1/2" wrench on the bolt/pin that holds the cross shaft in the carrier. Mine required 1/2". 8.5" 10 bolt carrier uses 5/16".
Well I realized I ordered a cast aluminum cover for a 8.5" 10 bolt not an 8.2". I noticed some companies listed the same cover for both 8.2" and 8.5" 10 bolts. So I started measuring my cover to see if it would work.
I have 12 cover bolts and it is not oval shaped at all.
View attachment 335239
Is this a 12 bolt axle? Or even a Dana 44? I've done numerous searches along the lines of "what rear axle 1973 C10" but nothing definitive comes up. Seems like the answers are for like newer than 1977 or older than 1970.
If I search for "5 lug 12 bolt axle" most results seem to be for axle shaft conversions from 6 to 5 lug for a 12 bolt.
Gonna do some more searching, but I'm curious if anyone has some insight.
Okay I'm confused about my rear axle. I thought I have a 10 bolt since it's 5 lug C10 truck. I thought it was probably an 8.2 since it doesn't have the square lugs at 5 & 7 o'clock in the casting.
View attachment 335240
The 8.2" 10 bolt is also identifiable by the use of an 1/2" wrench on the bolt/pin that holds the cross shaft in the carrier. Mine required 1/2". 8.5" 10 bolt carrier uses 5/16".
Well I realized I ordered a cast aluminum cover for a 8.5" 10 bolt not an 8.2". I noticed some companies listed the same cover for both 8.2" and 8.5" 10 bolts. So I started measuring my cover to see if it would work.
I have 12 cover bolts and it is not oval shaped at all.
View attachment 335239
Is this a 12 bolt axle? Or even a Dana 44? I've done numerous searches along the lines of "what rear axle 1973 C10" but nothing definitive comes up. Seems like the answers are for like newer than 1977 or older than 1970.
If I search for "5 lug 12 bolt axle" most results seem to be for axle shaft conversions from 6 to 5 lug for a 12 bolt.
Gonna do some more searching, but I'm curious if anyone has some insight.
Didn’t know that. I knew early Wagy’s had themMy 75 K5 had a 12b.
GM did put D44's in the rear axles of half tons. It was in GMC's and prior to '73 and squarebody trucks. The 2wd GMC's were still 6 lug vs the Chevy trucks running the 5 lug pattern on the 2wds. The other difference was the GMC's got leaf spring suspension vs the coil spring/control arm setup on the Chevy's.