Replacing brake calipers on a Hyundai Santa Fe SUV is no little chore. It's still expanded knotty than most vehicles through the Santa Fe comes with an anti-lock braking development. As of this, bleeding the braking manner after replacement is yet bounteous explicit.
Instructions
2. Detach the brake hose from the caliper. Pitch out the washers used with the becoming bolt and plug the brake border with a abundance of rubber.3.
Replacing the Caliper
1. Remove the trundle from the vehicle after lifting it onto the jack. Enshrine to bag the "five star" imitation on the lug nuts, removing the one across from the one you formerly removed.Disconnect the caliper mounting bolts and remove the caliper. It should rotate upward on the boot pin and then slide off.
4. Install the inexperienced caliper, sliding it into the pin boot carefully and pivoting it down onto the bracket or rotor. Tighten the caliper bolts to 58 foot pounds to 73 foot pounds for a front caliper and 37 foot pounds to 44 foot pounds on a rear caliper.
5. Reconnect the brake hose, using contemporary washers with the becoming bolt. Tighten the bolt to 18 foot pounds to 22 foot pounds.
6. Bleed the anti-lock brake system. You must use a Hi-Scan Pro device for Hyundai vehicles to do this.
7. Place the wheel back on and lower the vehicle. Test the brakes, first by pumping them for firmness while stopped and then while driving.
Bleeding the Brake System
8. Connect a clear plastic tube to the wheel cylinder's bleeder plug with the other end in a half-filled clear plastic bottle. Connect a Hi-Scan Pro device to the data link connector under the dash panel.
9. Select Hyundai vehicle diagnosis" on the Hi-Scan device, then the vehicle name, "Anti-Lock Brake system" and "air bleeding mode." Press "yes" for operating the motor pump and solenoid valve.
10. Wait one minute until you operate the air bleeding. Pump the brake pedal several times until fluid runs out without bubbles when you loosen the bleeder screw.