I've had front and rear drums turned. I have no shudder during braking (because the new front drums needed turning) but I think the front pulls to the left so I will swap the front drums left to right and see if that changes anything. I've had all 4 wheels balanced, but only the rears were road-force balanced. The fronts were regular balanced.
But something is shaking at pretty close to 60 mph, in the front.
When you search the web for brake drum balancing, you don't find much. You'll find a ton of stuff for drum servicing in general.
There's a video of a guy that made a jig out of aluminum U-channel. Another channel comes up at a right angle, the drum center hole rides against it. The idea is to balance the drum on slightly off-set knife edge, place a scale so the free edge of the drum rests on the scale. Mark the drum at 90 degree locations, then lift and reposition the drum 4 times, take a weight measurement each time. You can figure out where the heaviest point is, and remove material (or maybe weld new material) as needed. He makes the observation that rust takes a toll on the balance of these drums.
There are others that say that you can balance a drum on a standard wheel balancer. I don't see why not, but after billions of videos posted to utube there doesn't seem to be one for that.
What I found interesting is this thread:
Projects - Balancing Brake Drums
Posts 14 and 15. The (seemingly high-end ?) Boling Brothers drums are not measured for balance! And they needed balancing!
"I did confirm with Boling Brother that they do not balance their drums. So I sent the drums out the the engine shop to have them balanced and they found that each drum was 20 grams out of balance. Because the drums were machined so well on the outside they were able to add the weights to the outside, rather than drill the drums."
I'm starting to think that any drum that does not come with machining marks, drill holes, or welded weights will almost certainly not be balanced and should be balanced. What this means for aftermarket drums vs factory OEM, I don't know.
(later, as I do more searching...)
Well lookie here:
https://www.chevelles.com/threads/who-balances-brake-drums.647705/
Post #17: "Quick lesson: look for the balancing weights."
The question does pop up in the old car / old vehicle forums -> "Who balances brake drums". There is no consistent, universal, or actionable answer. Always in these threads they will say back in the olde daze you balanced the wheels while on the car (not sure how they did that on the rear wheels). That took operator skill I suppose, but all I can think about is the interaction with the suspension and steering during that has got to be influencing the results.
But something is shaking at pretty close to 60 mph, in the front.
When you search the web for brake drum balancing, you don't find much. You'll find a ton of stuff for drum servicing in general.
There's a video of a guy that made a jig out of aluminum U-channel. Another channel comes up at a right angle, the drum center hole rides against it. The idea is to balance the drum on slightly off-set knife edge, place a scale so the free edge of the drum rests on the scale. Mark the drum at 90 degree locations, then lift and reposition the drum 4 times, take a weight measurement each time. You can figure out where the heaviest point is, and remove material (or maybe weld new material) as needed. He makes the observation that rust takes a toll on the balance of these drums.
There are others that say that you can balance a drum on a standard wheel balancer. I don't see why not, but after billions of videos posted to utube there doesn't seem to be one for that.
What I found interesting is this thread:
Projects - Balancing Brake Drums
Posts 14 and 15. The (seemingly high-end ?) Boling Brothers drums are not measured for balance! And they needed balancing!
"I did confirm with Boling Brother that they do not balance their drums. So I sent the drums out the the engine shop to have them balanced and they found that each drum was 20 grams out of balance. Because the drums were machined so well on the outside they were able to add the weights to the outside, rather than drill the drums."
I'm starting to think that any drum that does not come with machining marks, drill holes, or welded weights will almost certainly not be balanced and should be balanced. What this means for aftermarket drums vs factory OEM, I don't know.
(later, as I do more searching...)
Well lookie here:
https://www.chevelles.com/threads/who-balances-brake-drums.647705/
Post #17: "Quick lesson: look for the balancing weights."
The question does pop up in the old car / old vehicle forums -> "Who balances brake drums". There is no consistent, universal, or actionable answer. Always in these threads they will say back in the olde daze you balanced the wheels while on the car (not sure how they did that on the rear wheels). That took operator skill I suppose, but all I can think about is the interaction with the suspension and steering during that has got to be influencing the results.















