Gibson99 wrote:not to crap on the thread, but i do have to wonder how much of the improvement was gained by changing the brake fluid. First time i changed it on my miata (and did nothing else - didn't touch pads, rotors or any adjustments) it firmed up the pedal and gave me better response and control at the threshhold - I don't have ABS on the miata so it's easier to tell at the threshhold. I have no doubt that repeated hard braking will ABSOLUTELY be improved with this mod, but i do have to wonder how much of the initial impressions are solely because of fresh brake fluid.
that said - when i upgraded the rear drums to disk on my old 88, the difference was truly night and day. the car was flatter and much more confident feeling under hard braking... hell, even under light braking it just felt better. yes, i flushed the whole system and ended up with all new brake fluid as a result, and i'm sure that helped, but i've never felt THAT much improvement from simply bleeding before... and i've worked on a lot of cars...
also just to recap - all you need on each side is the avalon/es300/gen3v6(w/abs) caliper bracket, 2pot caliper, and the banjo bolt - you didn't have to change the flex line, right? I'm thinking I may do this when it comes time to do a brake job.
btw - nobody else mentioned it, but the fact that one of your pads was at the metal and the other one was only half gone means your needed to replace that caliper anyway, so this was a perfect time to do this job anyway!
Changin' your brake fluid helps very little, the calipers do most of the work, the brake fluid absorbs the heat from the calipers.
So if you have new brake fluid it won't boil as fast compared to old fluid.
I just looked at the 1996 ES300 rear calipers, and it looks like you can swap the rear ones too, i'll have to pull the part and see if it bolts on the Solara.
2000 Solara SE auto V6. Diamond White Pearl.
Top Speed Run finished at 130 mph.
Too many modifcations for the signature.