you will need to bleed your brakes .allways start with the brake the farthest from the master cylinder , you can either gravity bleed them by yourself by loosening the bleeder valve on each wheel for 30 minutes each or have someone pump the brakes for you . have them pump the brakes until they get a partial pedal and hold until you release the wheel bleeder .repeat process 3 or 4 times until fluid is free of air and repeat process on each wheel .if this doesnt work you might need to replace youe master cylinder
Yes, but never trust them to work. Every six thousand miles the drums should be pulled off and brakes cleaned and adjusted. That is when the tires are off for a rotate anyhow.
check the pickup coil. that was the prob
no 84 and 85 change out.
Make sure fuel is getting too the carburetor. The carburetor might not be getting fuel or it could possibly be getting too much fuel. Adjusts the carburetor.
a 96 Mazda pickup
brake calibers might need replacing,the pistons might be getting stuck,its easy to replace.
You can't adjust disc brakes
need to bleed the lines
Yes it does, I have one!
with your ebrake cable.
Cars no but if you want to spend alot of money pickup trucks can. I personally am just going to keep the brakes I have on my truck.
fordparts.com shows disc brakes on the front of a 1988 Ford Ranger
On the 4WD SR5 truck, front brakes are disc, and rear brakes are drum.
I am watching my husband get madder and madder
Yes
In a manual for that vehicle.
No. The 1997 has drum brakes and the 2003 has disc brakes.