Sacramento Mobile Brake

Sacramento Mobile Brake is your car making noises? shaking? squealing? you may need new Brakes. Are you busy? dont have a lot of money? I come to YOU! 916-276-1788

08/03/2015

Good morning! Just wanted to say thank you to the people that called upon Sacramento Mobile Brake and enjoyed our convenient service but sadly im folding up shop.. Im actually back to work at a great dealership full time finally and enjoying regular paychecks and good health plan (not getting any younger.. ) im also able to get back to focusing on my love of playing music and other small endeavors. If you need any recommendations on repair or a place to get your car repaired please feel free to write me and ill try and help the best i can. Thank again!

05/11/2015

FREE Brake inspections this week! Does your car need a check up?? We never charge for a primary diagnosis, give us a call.. 916-276-1788

05/08/2015

Friday! well for some of us i guess.. :) Sunday is Mothers day so we wont be taking any appointments But Monday we are ON! 916-276-1788

04/29/2015

Your front brake pads should last between 25,000 to 50,000 miles on average.. if you haven't had them replaced and have that many miles since new or since your last pad replacement then make an appointment. You will save a lot by doing them now before they have a chance to damage your brake rotor$$$. Front pad replacement is $109.00 on special now! 916-276-1788

04/27/2015

ok, give us a call at 916-276-1788... we are starting to book up and get busy already. Thank you for choosing me for your Brake and repair work last week, I really appreciate it!!

04/27/2015

After working on cars for almost 30 years ive come to realize that one of the most under looked safety items on cars and trucks next to brakes is TIRES. A new study by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) reinforces that advice by determining that vehicles driving on tires are under inflated by more than 25 percent are three times more likely to be involved in a crash related to tire problems than vehicles with proper inflation. And tires under inflated are up to 25 percent run the risk of overheating, leading to failure, and at the very least adversely affecting handling and tread life. PLEASE CHECK THE AIR IN YOUR TIRES FREQUENTLY!!!! That means at every fuel fill up!!! If you want to stay safe please get a gauge and check your tires air pressure! if you don't want to do it yourself, just go to any reputable shop or tire store and they will do it for you free of charge. If they dont want to do it, dont ever go to that shop again. I always check your pressure and examine your tires for FREE when i work on your car.. I want you and your family to be safe, This is important, please do not over look it!

04/24/2015

Happy Friday! Have any questions about a car or truck problem? Give me a call, maybe I can help! 916-276-1788.

04/15/2015

Get your brakes done! making appointments for tomorrow, today is booked! :)

04/13/2015

Good Morning Monday! It really is rewarding offering a service to help folks be safe on the road!! If you are having brake problems, shaking steering wheel, squealing during stopping, beat a local written brake repair estimate or just want them checked out give me a call.. 916-276-1788!

04/10/2015

Happy Friday! That doesnt mean we are closed, If you need work done on Saturday 9am-4pm! we are open and will come to you! 10% off brake work for all new customers!!

04/06/2015

A major test of brake systems took place in 1902 on an unpaved road in New York City called Riverside Drive. Ransom E. Olds had arranged to test a new brake system against the tire brake of a four-horse coach and the internal drum brake of a Victoria horseless carriage. His Oldsmobile sported a single flexible stainless-steel band, wrapped around a drum on the rear axle. When the brake pedal was applied, the band contracted to grip the drum.

A vast improvement on brakes was born, one that would pave the way for the systems afterwards. The repercussions of which spread to every facet of the industry, even something like being able to compare car insurance without the advancements in brakes that have taken place.

Olds had entered his car in the Blue Ribbon Contest, a 100-mile race scheduled for August and wanted to be sure his external brake was a match for the Victoria's expanding-shoe internal drum design and the coach's tire brake -- a pad that was applied to the tire by a long lever. Although it ground down solid rubber tires pretty quickly, the tire brake was popular on carriages and many early autos.

From a thunderous speed of 14 mph, the Oldsmobile stopped in 21.5 ft., the Victoria in 37 ft. and the horses (which may not have been going 14 mph, but had no engine braking to aid them) in 77.5 ft.

The Oldsmobile went on to win two of nine blue ribbons awarded in the race. The car's braking system made such a big impression on other manufacturers that by 1903 most had adopted it. By 1904, practically all car makers were building cars with an external brake on each rear wheel.

Almost at once, the external brake demonstrated some serious flaws in everyday use. On hills, for example, the brake unwrapped and gave way after several seconds. A driver unlucky enough to stall on a grade soon found himself rolling backward.

For this reason, chocks were an important piece of on-board equipment. It was a common sight to see a passenger scurrying from inside the car with wood in his hands to block the wheels.

There was another drawback to the external brake. It had no protection from dirt so its bands and drums quickly wore. A brake job every 200 to 300 miles was considered normal.

The problems associated with the external brake were overcome by the internal brake. As long as the brake shoes were under pressure, they stayed against the drums to keep the car from rolling backward on hills. And, since brake parts were inside drums and protected from dirt, drivers could go over 1,000 miles between brake overhauls.

The drum brake, as it is now known, became all-dominant in the United States. In Europe, particularly in Great Britain, it had to share the stage with disc brakes. Disc brakes became more or less standard on European cars during the '50s, about 20 years before they were adopted by American manufacturers in 1973.

This is ironic, because the spot-type disc brake is an American invention. In 1898, Elmer Ambrose Sperry of Cleveland designed an electric car having front-wheel disc brakes.

He made a large disc integral with the hub on each wheel. Electromagnets were used to press smaller discs, lined with a friction material, against spots on the rotating disc to bring the wheel to a stop. Springs retracted the spot discs when current was interrupted.

Meanwhile in Great Britain, a patent was issued in 1902 to F. W. Lanchester for a nonelectric spot disc braking system that's similar in principle to what we have today. The biggest problem that Lanchester encountered was noise. Metal-to-metal contact between his copper linings and the metal disc caused an intense screech that sent chills through anyone within earshot.

The problem was solved in 1907 when Herbert Frood, another Englishman, came up with the idea of lining pads with asbestos. The new material was quickly adopted by car manufacturers on both drum and disc brakes. Asbestos linings also outlasted other friction materials by a wide margin. The 10,000-mile brake job had arrived.

As roads improved and cars began to be driven at high speeds, manufacturers recognized the need for even greater braking power. One solution to the problem became apparent during the Elgin road Race of 1915. A Duesenberg took the flats at 80 mph, then screeched to a virtual crawl to negotiate the hairpin curves. Duesenberg's secret for such magnificent braking power was to simply use an internal brake on each front wheel as well as each rear wheel.

In 1918, a young inventor named Malcolm Lougheed (who later changed the spelling of his name to Lockheed) applied hydraulics to braking. He used cylinders and tubes to transmit fluid pressure against brake shoes, pushing the shoes against the drums. In 1921, the first passenger car to be equipped with four-wheel hydraulic brakes appeared -- the Model A Duesenberg.

Carmakers as a group were not quick to adopt hydraulics. Ten years after the Model A Duesie, in 1931, only Chrysler, Dodge, Desoto, Plymouth, Auburn, Franklin, Reo, and Graham had hydraulic brakes. All the others still had cable-operated mechanical brakes. In fact, it was not until 1939 that Ford finally gave in, becoming the last major manufacturer to switch to hydraulic brakes.

The basic braking system we have today was pretty much in place by 1921, including a refinement some regard as contemporary -- power assist.

Power assist, technically, dates back to 1903 when a car called the Tincher used air brakes. But the first car to be equipped with a vacuum-operated power booster similar to those we have today was the 1928 Pierce-Arrow. It used vacuum from the inlet manifold to reduce the physical effort needed to apply brakes. Vacuum boosters from then to now have similar designs.

The first widespread deviation from vacuum power assist came about in 1985. Some '85 GM cars use an electrically driven brake booster, which is smaller and lighter than the conventional vacuum booster, giving an all-hydraulic system. Some cars with antilock brakes also use all-hydraulic systems.

The first car to have self-adjusting brakes was the 1925 Cole. The prototype for today's systems appeared on the 1946 Studebaker. The mechanism by Wagner Electric Co., consisted of an adjusting wedge under the influence of a tension spring. As linings wore, a plug receded to move a pin and lever against the spring. This forced the adjusting wedge against brake shoes, which expanded to keep linings at a preset distance from the drums.

As for the antilock (antiskid) units now available in the U.S., they are hardly new. The first practical antiskid braking system, named Maxaret, was developed in 1958 by the Road Research Laboratories in Great Britain and was first applied to the Jensen FF sports sedan in 1966.

Three years later, in 1969, the Lincoln Continental Mark III was equipped with an Auto-Linear antilock unit developed by Kelsey-Hayes. Sensors on the rear wheels transmitted signals to a transistorized "computer" behind the glove box. The computer controlled a vacuum-operated valve on the rear brake line to modulate pressure to the rear brakes when the sensors told the computer that the brakes were locking.

Cost and some technical problems caused the shelving of this unit. But now, updated versions that give four-wheel skid control are offered on almost every car model, although initially they were available only on high-end cars like Lincoln and Mercedes, and a few European cars.

Computerized brakes notwithstanding, there is a piece of advice about using brakes that's as relevant today as it was in 1909 when it was first published in The American Cyclopedia of the Automobile:

"Good driving in traffic is shown by making the minimum use of brakes. The strain on passengers amounts to intense nervousness when the car is constantly driven so that the least alteration of direction or of pace on the part of any vehicle ahead results in the violent application of the brake."

And so it will always be.

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Sacramento, CA
95843

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(916) 276-1788

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