You dont. seriously
Lift the car on a jack, remove the car tires, remove the brake shoe/calipers and remove the old brake pads. Properly dispose of the old pads, put in the new brake pads, replace the brake shoe/calipers, replace the tire and lower the car to the ground.
When replacing your brake pads on your Ford Explorer, you first need to jack up the vehicle and remove the tire. This will give you access to the brakes. Locate the caliper, remove the two bolts and slide the caliper off. Inside the calipers are the brake pads.
remove the brake caliper and the rotors come right off
No steering power or brake power ford explorer 1999?
FIRST, YOU REMOVE THE TIRES THEN YOU GET EITHER 3/8 OR 10 MILLIMETER HEX SOCKET TO REMOVE THE CALIPER. REMOVE THE BRAKE LINES AND PULL HER OFF. INSTALLATION IS REVERSE
No. They are the same
remove the brake calipers and then remove the bolts holding the brake caliper bracket. once this is done the rotor will slide right off. It may need a good hit or two with a rubber mallet to loosen it up if its rusted.
I am going to suggest that you DO NOT interchange parts that control your safety in a vehicle. Calipers are not that expensive. Just get the ones you need.
bulb # for brake light on your explorer is a 3157 backup light bulb # is 3156 hope this helps
No, they will not clear the brake calipers.
If you mean the " BRAKE " light in your dash it's just under the " 0 " on your tachometer
Motorcraft High Performance DOT 3 Brake Fluid