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Brake hardware, fasteners, and fittings are the structural and mechanical connectors that hold your braking system together and keep it functioning precisely. This category spans everything from parking brake cables and power brake boosters to caliper bolt kits, bleeder screws, drum adjuster assemblies, and the dozens of small clips, springs, and pins that prevent noise, vibration, and uneven wear. Most of these parts don't have a fixed replacement interval — they fail from corrosion, heat cycling, cable fraying, or physical damage during pad and rotor swaps. Parking brake cables typically need replacement every 75,000–100,000 miles or when stretch causes excessive lever travel. When buying, OEM hardware is worth the premium on safety-critical fasteners like caliper bracket bolts (torque specs and thread pitch must match exactly), while aftermarket options from Dorman, Raybestos, or ACDelco are generally reliable for springs, clips, and dust shields. Always confirm fitment by year, make, model, and trim — caliper hardware especially varies by brake package.
Signs you need replacement
- Parking brake won't hold on a slope or requires excessive travel. This typically points to a stretched or frayed parking brake cable. On rear drum setups, a worn self-adjuster cable or adjuster screw assembly can produce the same symptom.
- Brake pedal feels soft, spongy, or sinks under pressure. A failing power brake booster or a seized/stripped bleeder screw that allowed air into the system during a bleed attempt are common causes alongside hydraulic issues.
- Rattling or clunking from a wheel during braking or over bumps. Worn or missing anti-rattle clips, caliper support springs, or loose caliper pin hardware allow the caliper to shift slightly, causing metal-to-metal contact and noise.
- Caliper slides sticking or brakes dragging on one corner. Corroded or seized caliper pins and pin sleeves are the usual culprits — the caliper can't float properly, causing uneven pad wear and heat buildup on that wheel.
- Brake dust shield is bent, cracked, or making contact with the rotor. A shield rubbing the rotor produces a consistent scraping sound that mimics worn pads. Visible deformation or rust perforation are reasons to replace before the rotor is damaged.
- Brake fluid leaking at a hose connection or caliper fitting. A stripped banjo bolt, cracked copper crush washer, or damaged hose lock clip will cause seepage at the connection point — any fluid loss at a fitting requires immediate attention.
Frequently asked questions
- Should I replace caliper hardware every time I do a brake job? Yes — caliper bolt kits, pin kits, and anti-rattle clips are low-cost insurance and are often included in premium pad kits for good reason. Reusing corroded or galled hardware can cause uneven pad wear, caliper binding, and comeback repairs. Budget $8–$25 per axle for a full hardware kit.
- Is OEM always better for brake fasteners, or will aftermarket work? For caliper bracket mounting bolts, OEM or OEM-spec fasteners are strongly preferred — thread pitch, shank diameter, and torque values are safety-critical. For springs, clips, dust shields, and adjuster components, quality aftermarket brands like Dorman, Carlson, or ACDelco perform comparably at lower cost and often offer improved corrosion resistance.
- How much does a parking brake cable replacement cost, and is it a DIY job? Parts run $20–$80 per cable depending on vehicle; rear cables on trucks and SUVs with independent suspension can run higher. Labor typically adds $75–$150 if you're paying a shop. DIY difficulty is moderate — front or intermediate cables are straightforward, but rear cables on lifted or rusty vehicles often require significant time freeing corroded guides and equalizers.