Yes. If your question is regarding the operation of the calipers. They do operate in the same manner as the front calipers.
No need to rotate the front caliper pistons as you compress the front calipers. That process is only for the rear calipers because of the parking brake mechanism.
Push in. I've change my front pads several times and they compress straight in.
use a large c-clamp aiso use the old brake shoe on the caliper piston to squeeze it back in
The easiest way is with a "C" clamp.
Check the pistons inside the calipers, usually they are the reason brakes lock up.
theyre calipers and pads.. easy to swap em out.. theyre calipers and pads.. easy to swap em out..
The brake calipers can be the same the front calipers on turbo cars is normally bigger as up to 90% of your braking force is on the front brakes but the back ones are somtimes bigger not always
No, front disc rear drum.
The front calipers push in with a large clamp to pliers. The rear calipers require a special tool that twists the piston while pushing it in.
Contaminated fluid? Frozen calipers?
check your calipers,theymay have froze up
There is a set screw on the back of the Caliper that you turn to compress the piston. You use the same set screw to adjust the brakes when you change brake pads.