Read through a few threads on this topic and didn't see an answer:
If my proportioning valve is blocked or clogged, causing my truck to swerve to the right when I hit my brakes, will taking it off, spraying it with brake cleaner, and blowing compressed air through it solve the problem?
Or is it a situation where once it goes bad it must be replaced?
Thanks in advance.
Edit 7/19/11: After replacing the proportioning valve, front calipers, rear wheel cylinders and installing a new spring kit on the rear drums, I replaced the brake pads (which were new a year ago, less than 10k on them) that came with the original set of remanned calipers I bought when I first did a brake job in July '10.
This solved my pulling issue. Turns out the remanned calipers had two different types/lots of brake pads in the boxes which made one side stop quicker than the other. Talk about a pain in the ass to diagnose! Always start with the simplest solution first.
If my proportioning valve is blocked or clogged, causing my truck to swerve to the right when I hit my brakes, will taking it off, spraying it with brake cleaner, and blowing compressed air through it solve the problem?
Or is it a situation where once it goes bad it must be replaced?
Thanks in advance.
Edit 7/19/11: After replacing the proportioning valve, front calipers, rear wheel cylinders and installing a new spring kit on the rear drums, I replaced the brake pads (which were new a year ago, less than 10k on them) that came with the original set of remanned calipers I bought when I first did a brake job in July '10.
This solved my pulling issue. Turns out the remanned calipers had two different types/lots of brake pads in the boxes which made one side stop quicker than the other. Talk about a pain in the ass to diagnose! Always start with the simplest solution first.
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