what?
Okay so lets say he goes out and spends $100 for new rotors and grease seals. Re-packs his old wheel bearings and gets it all installed properly. Assuming he already has a torque wrench and the correct spindle nut tool. If you've got the caliper off you mine as well replace the brake pads, so thats another $50.
Then he's driving the truck and the vibration is still there because it is actually being caused by worn ball joints or radius arm bushings, how can you justify that advise you are giving? That $200 he just spent and those 2 hours of labor could have been used towards solving the real problem.
Diagnose the problem, dont throw money at it........
That is just amazing that you guys can jump to conclusions like that...... Oh vibration under braking = rotors?
that just doesnt make sense...there are about 30 other things that can cause a vibration like that...... a warped rotor wont always vibrate either.....especially when going slow.........
Start with the basics.....
When were the brakes last replaced? How mnay miles are on them? Who did the work?
When does the vibration happen? Do you feel it in the brake pedal or in the steering wheel?
If you feel like dropping a couple hundered bucks on new rotors go for it, but if the vibration is still there whenyou are done, then what? Throw another $50-500 at it for radius arm bushings? Then the vibration is stillthere, now what, another $100-300 for ball joints, vibration still there, then what? tie rod ends? thats the WRONG way to find the problem