Hi all. I've gotten some good information from this forum, so I wanted to post a tip I found on-line and used this weekend. Worked great on my 2004 GP after banging on the rotor with a hammer for 20 minutes.
As it's demonstrated in this video, it works really well.
Remove Rusted Brake Rotors ( Easy for any car or truck ) - YouTube
The jist of it is that you use a couple grade 8 bolts to push the rusted rotor off the hub. Here is what you'll need for the front brakes:
Two 1/2 inch grade 8 bolts, 2.5 inches long (I think anything between 2 and 3 inches would have reached)
Two grade 8 washers
Two grade 8 nuts
I used "regular" bolts I had laying around and they bent. Maybe grade 5 would work, but for the cost of materials, I just went with grade 8.
After removing the brake caliper and caliper bracket, slot the grade 8 bolts through the same holes the bracket uses. It's tight, but slip the washer over the bolt and tread the nut on it. Run the nut all the way down till it's tight. At this point the nut will be tight against the caliper bracket mount, and the bolt will be pushing against the inside of the rotor. Repeat the procedure for the other bracket hole. Now grab a couple of wrenches and start cranking down on the nut and bolt. Alternate a little so that you spread it out. After a little bit, mine popped loose with a loud bang. It still took a couple of hammer swings to get the other side loose. It would have saved me a headache if I'd known this before I started.
I did not need this for the rear brakes, but I'd guess you need bolts one size smaller in diameter. The rear caliper bracket bolts are definitely smaller and the 1/2 inch won't fit. Grab a couple sizes smaller to be sure.
One other little tip that would have saved me some time. The rear calipers need to turn as they push in. I did the brake pads on this car before, but have no recollection of this. They made a special tool to do this, but my regular brake tool did the unintentionally. I have something just like this that works great most of the time.
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And somewhere in time, I had this for working on a Lumina that would have done the job too.
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