Walking in to one of the many Jacksonville, FL auto repair shops and asking for an estimate on brake replacement should be easy, right? They're just brakes, after all.
What you might not realize is that your car's brakes are actually a complex system of parts. Fluid, hoses, calipers, drums, cylinders, pads, rotors, pistons, and of course the wheel all play a vital part in making sure that your two-ton steel death machine stops before it hits the neighbor's dog.
The cost of brake replacement varies a lot depending on which of those parts need to be replaced. Some of them can run a few hundred dollars, or if a few are broken at once, it could cost a couple of thousand dollars.
If you're mechanically-minded and good with your hands, it is possible to change brake pads yourself. Just get the proper tools from your local auto parts store, make sure your vehicle is nice and cooled down (brakes stay hot for a long time even after you're done driving), and jack it up. Take the wheel off, remove the brake caliper bolts, squeeze the brake piston back to make room for the new brake pad, and slip it in. It's easier said than done, but it's not that hard to do.
Most often, of course, the brake replacement consists of new pads and little else. Brake pads are designed to wear down over time, so replacing them is just basic maintenance. Brake pads have wear indicators -- tiny metal tabs that are designed to squeal when you step on the breaks if they're wearing low. If you hear squealing when you step on the brakes, it's time for a brake replacement. Ignore it, and soon you'll hear grinding -- that means that the pad has entirely worn down, and you're seriously damaging your brakes.
If that's already happened, you're looking at a tidy sum to get some more critical parts like the rotor or the drum replaced -- likely both. There are other reasons that brakes might stop working as well, however.
If you get air into a pneumatic brake line, for example, brakes can respond differently. Unlike pneumatic fluid, air will compress when squeezed, which can slow down your brakes' response time and it can reduce the effectiveness of the brake as well. On the chaotic streets of Jacksonville, FL, that kind of delay and inefficiency can spell disaster. A similar effect can happen if your brake fluid is low, so before you assume the worst, find your brake fluid reservoir and check the levels. If they're low, just fill them back up with the proper kind of brake fluid.
Brake replacement shouldn't be your first thought if your brakes start to lose performance -- but it should always be something you're ready do have done, because the other option is an unstoppable recipe for disaster.