That truck probably has the sealed s-cam tubes that you don’t have to grease. Problem is, after a few years the grease either gets used up or dries out and the s-cam shaft can start to seize up and stick.
If you look at the s-cam tube there are stickers that are hiding Allen key head plugs that can be removed and replaced with a standard grease zerk. Then you can maintain them as per normal.
Just one possibility that I’ve experienced.
Can one hard brake create damage to a truck?
Discussion in 'Trucks [ Eighteen Wheelers ]' started by chrisX, Jun 2, 2023.
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In front of me was a straight truck. A Tesla cut in front of the truck, and then the truck started breaking hard, and so did I. The Tesla was not in my vision.
Then, I figured the Tesla was trying to follow another pickup truck. The pickup truck swing on the road to make unpredictable moves. The Tesla also kept a distance from the truck instead of following right behind.
This is the hardest brake I have done all time. I should keep a longer distance.dibstr Thanks this. -
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Brake adjustment (assuming its not near the end of its stroke) will not affect the amount of braking force to the wheel very much. It can, however, affect the timing that the shoes start to grab. More stroke required from the chamber means more lag to get the shoes to touch the drum. If one brake is out of adjustment and the other is correct, the correctly adjusted brake will start working a fraction of a second quicker.
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