Quote (Fiddy @ Feb 10 2015 08:58pm)
no leaking at all, it's front disk hence rotor, 30k miles. oversized tires ( why the bearing blew out)
could the wobbly rotor cause the pistons in the calipers to compress too far which give me this mushy braking? i figure thats the only thing.. dunno tho.
unlikely
The caliper and pads are stationary. There is enough slack in the rubber brake line section to allow for movement/turning, a bad wheel bearing would have zero effect on it really unless the rotor is actually gone, and the piston dislodges.
But again, what year make model? Because a lot of caliper pistons (mostly rear with e-brake on caliper setup) these days actually require a tool to turn them to take them out and / or put them back in to compress them.
Its going to be either a straight piston, or a spiral piston.
but again, unless the rotor is gone, that more then likely wouldnt be the issue.
Put the car up on jack stands, take all the tires off, fill the brake fluid reservoir, have someone pump the brakes continuously until you find the leak, or the brakes stiffen. Thats if you dont want to go with a UV dye/light test.
Or try gravity bleeding it. Leave the cap loose, but still covering the reservoir. And let it sit that way over night. It will allow the air to work its way out if it is just and air bubble issue. Ive had to do that cuz the standard bleed procedure on an old car of mine was just being a bastard.
There are so many things you can do. But id start with getting the car up and checking all the lines on all the tires.
And again, does it have rear drums or disk?
you would get a hell of a lot further if you would just provide the simple answers to the basic questions asked. What else is wrong with your car (wheel bearing) besides the brakes itself, is fairly irrelevant.