Okay, so I get my car today... it was my dad’s old car; 2001 Camry.
And to be honest I only drove it twice in my life; I always drove my
moms. Anyway, I had to park on a hill today so I put the parking break
on. Well, I had a bad night and I was talking to my friend about it
and we got in the car and I didn’t even think to take the parking
break off because I was too caught up in what I was doing. So
basically, I drove off; the car didn’t do anything at all... it didn’t
feel weird, so I had no clue. (I never had to use the PB w/my mom’s
car) We get to where we were going and when we got out I started to
smell this stench coming from the exhaust. It was horrible... it was
sort of like a burning smell but not really. Kinda just stinky. I get
back in the car, and realize that the parking break lever was up. I
had a heart attack... we didn’t drive THAT far, but it was far enough;
maybe about a 15 minute drive w/it on. After I put it off and parked
and got our coffee and came back out an hour later, I started up the
car, drove across the street and into another parking lot, got out and
smelled the car. It still smelled a TINY BIT but not really that much.
I went home, and smelled it again and it was BARELY noticeable, but
still there. And now I’m here. Did I ruin my car? My car that I JUST
got today, UGHHH. I’m really scared, does anybody know if something
could be wrong? The car ran fine the whole way home, though. So I’m
just wondering... Thanks.
Hopkins - 19 Jun 2005 13:33 GMT
You smoked the brakes, obviously. That's what you smelled.
If I'm not mistaken, the parking brake sets the rear brakes. You may
have glazed them... and heating the rotor probably didn't do it any
good. hmmm... I wonder if you cooked the brake fluid.
You didn't have any problems driving home because the front brakes are
used more than the back, when braking under normal conditions. Still,
you need to check the rear brakes -- you don't know what damage was
done until you look.
Daniel - 19 Jun 2005 14:18 GMT
Depends whether you have drum or disk rear brakes.
You ought to be able to see the drum or disk.
Drum brakes have a cable that activates the brake shoes.
Disk brakes (on all 6 cylinders I think) have a separate little drum
with parking brake shoes in them, so riding the parking brake would
have no effect on the standard rear disk brake pads.
Whichever you have, the odor was the brake lining overheating and
burning.
In no way means you "ruined your car". Worst case, you would need to
replace brake pads and possibly turn (or replace) drums.
Best case, brakes are stil OK just worn more rapidly.
Jason James - 19 Jun 2005 16:06 GMT
> Okay, so I get my car today... it was my dad's old car; 2001 Camry.
> And to be honest I only drove it twice in my life; I always drove my
[quoted text clipped - 18 lines]
> could be wrong? The car ran fine the whole way home, though. So I'm
> just wondering... Thanks.
Its a 6 cylinder? Must be for you not to notice the drop in power. If the 6
uses the rear standard pads and disk, then you should have it inspected for
charred linings,...if it uses separate shoes and drum ( a mini version of
std shoes and drum) they wil have worn out,...that has been my experience of
a GM Holden out here (Australia) subjected to the same thing. In either
case, you'll need an inspection.
Modt of us do it at least once,...but perhaps for not so long..
Jason
Daniel - 21 Jun 2005 13:57 GMT
I had to park on a hill today so I put the parking break (sic)
===========
Here's another suggestion, after you get it fixed.
When you park on a hill, before you turn off the engine, put the car in
Neutral, and set the parking brake, then ease off the main service
brake and pull up another notch or two on the parking brake lever as
required to hold the car from moving, then shift into Park and turn off
the engine.
That way, you won't forget to release the parking brake when starting
off and it will save putting extra load on the parking pawl in the
transmission, so it will release more easily when shifting back out of
Park.
Plus, you'll learn how to set the Parking brake. I happened to be using
the parking brake last night at a drive through, with the car idling in
Neutral, two separate times took my foot off the service brake - but
the car didn't creep forward - reminding me to release the parking
brake.
=============
By the way. Try this before doing work on the parking brake.
If it still holds the car, they may be working fine, even though you
burned the linings one time.
Car Guy - 22 Jun 2005 00:52 GMT
I too made that mistake on my 2002 Camry LE V6. Drove it at highway speeds
and realized that shake was because of the damn handbrake being up.
When I got to my first brake job at 60,000 miles, I replaced the rear pads,
and sanded the front and back rotors and they were good as new. The front
pads were just fine, the rears were worn off because of the parking brake
being on.
> Okay, so I get my car today... it was my dad's old car; 2001 Camry.
> And to be honest I only drove it twice in my life; I always drove my
[quoted text clipped - 18 lines]
> could be wrong? The car ran fine the whole way home, though. So I'm
> just wondering... Thanks.
Car Guy - 22 Jun 2005 00:53 GMT
Oh, and I also purged the brake fluid to make sure that fresh fluid was
there and it was not burnt.
>I too made that mistake on my 2002 Camry LE V6. Drove it at highway speeds
>and realized that shake was because of the damn handbrake being up.
[quoted text clipped - 26 lines]
>> could be wrong? The car ran fine the whole way home, though. So I'm
>> just wondering... Thanks.
nunya@nowhere.com - 23 Jun 2005 03:30 GMT
Chill it aint that big a deal.
I did it last month after a trip to the dealer, one of the mechanics set the
flipping brake and I didn't notice until 5 miles down the highway when the
heated brake pads caught my attention.
If you want to do something get a basic brake job. Stay away from midas and
such all they do is upsell.
Sharx35 - 23 Jun 2005 06:16 GMT
> Chill it aint that big a deal.
>
> I did it last month after a trip to the dealer, one of the mechanics set
> the
> flipping brake and I didn't notice until 5 miles down the highway when the
> heated brake pads caught my attention.
You usually ignore the IDIOT lights?
> If you want to do something get a basic brake job. Stay away from midas
> and
> such all they do is upsell.
John - 24 Jun 2005 02:10 GMT
yeah that's right jackass I PURPOSEDLY ignored the friggin light.
Sheesh.
davidj92 - 24 Jun 2005 02:33 GMT
> yeah that's right jackass I PURPOSEDLY ignored the friggin light.
>
> Sheesh.
Awww, c'mon now, John. You know he's perfect, he's never made a mistake in
his life and isn't afraid to tell the world about it. And he's probably 15
or 16 already. Just think how great he'll be when he gets to be 40 or so.
:-)
davidj92
Sharx35 - 24 Jun 2005 06:11 GMT
> yeah that's right jackass I PURPOSEDLY ignored the friggin light.
>
> Sheesh.
Only the blind or the terminally stupid would miss the idiot light.
Car Guy - 27 Jun 2005 00:15 GMT
In my case, the parking brake light is in the same area and angle as my
steering wheel so when I look at the dash, the top of the wheel covers the
light.
They should have moved the light to the lower panel where the check engine
light as well as others are for my 2002 Camry
>> yeah that's right jackass I PURPOSEDLY ignored the friggin light.
>>
>> Sheesh.
>
> Only the blind or the terminally stupid would miss the idiot light.
Sharx35 - 27 Jun 2005 09:29 GMT
> In my case, the parking brake light is in the same area and angle as my
> steering wheel so when I look at the dash, the top of the wheel covers the
> light.
>
> They should have moved the light to the lower panel where the check engine
> light as well as others are for my 2002 Camry
Yeah, I have to admit, some viewing angles hide certain things.
>>> yeah that's right jackass I PURPOSEDLY ignored the friggin light.
>>>
>>> Sheesh.
>>
>> Only the blind or the terminally stupid would miss the idiot light.
hachiroku - 31 Jul 2005 03:26 GMT
>> In my case, the parking brake light is in the same area and angle as my
>> steering wheel so when I look at the dash, the top of the wheel covers
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
>>>
>>> Only the blind or the terminally stupid would miss the idiot light.
Now apologize for calling him an idiot...
hachiroku - 31 Jul 2005 03:33 GMT
> Okay, so I get my car today... it was my dads old car; 2001 Camry. And
> to be honest I only drove it twice in my life; I always drove my moms.
[quoted text clipped - 17 lines]
> The car ran fine the whole way home, though. So Im just wondering...
> Thanks.
If you have disc brakes in the rear, the parking brake is a drum type
brake, the drum being the hub in the rotor. The shoes are about 4mm thick.
Tolerance is 1-2 mm. You have to drive a LONG time with the P Brake on
before you need new shoes. The Toyota dealers I deal with have NEVER sold
parking brake shoes, and they are not available aftermarket. I'd say, if
this is the system you have, you're good.
Also, were the brakes smoking? I wouldn't worry a lot if not. I drove mine
with a sticking caliper; 15 minutes and I had billows of smoke pouring
out! (Yeah, I know the smell you're talking about! Smells like some piece
of electronic equipment smoked bad!)
If the pedal gets spongy, it means you boiled the brake fluid. You would
have noticed this while you were driving. If this didn't happen ,get your
usual brake service done about 5-7,000 miles earlier, and have them flush
the brake system (unless you do it yourself...)