Automotive Tips from Autotronics of St. Peter: Rotor Problems

The brake rotor, or disc, is attached to your wheel. The brake pads rub on the rotor to slow your car when you are driving in St. Peter.

Rotors can warp, crack or become misaligned. They can also be damaged by worn out brake pads that scratch grooves into the surface. These conditions result in less contact surface for the brake pads, leaving you with reduced braking power.

Over time and miles, rotors can also wear down below safe specifications. It is important for St. Peter drivers to know that simply replacing brake pads on a wheel with a bad rotor will not solve the problem. Depending on their condition, rotors may be resurfaced or replaced.

Brake noise or a pulsation in the brake pedal are signs of potential brake problems that should be addressed right away. If you have any brake concerns, please have your friendly and professional Autotronics of St. Peter tech perform a thorough inspection.

Give us a call.

Autotronics of St. Peter
111 Jefferson Avenue
St. Peter, MN 56082
507.934.9290
http://autotronicsstpeter.com

The Light Nobody Wants to See (Check Engine Light)

You’ve probably had your Check Engine Light go on.  Then it goes off and you figure, hey, whatever the problem was, it’s gone now and I don’t have to worry about it.  Well, the problem may have gone away and it may not have.

Your vehicle likely has one of these warning lights on the instrument panel: an amber light that looks like an engine or reads “Check Engine” or “Service Vehicle Soon.”  If that light comes on and stays on, it usually means there’s something amiss but not urgently in need of service.  (Now if it’s blinking, that’s another story that we’ll deal with in a minute.)

Sometimes when it comes on and stays steadily lit, the problem will go away and the light will go out.  Sometimes it will stay on until you get the problem fixed.  Either way, the engine’s computer will store a code that can provide clues to what’s not working—or wasn’t working—the way it’s supposed to.

If you are just dying to know what that code is, you can buy a little code reader or take your vehicle to an auto parts store and they’ll read it.  Problem is, the code offers so many options that unless you are a trained technician, you probably won’t have a clue what those codes mean. 

So if you want to be sure, take it to your vehicle repair facility and have them check it.  Technicians are trained to decipher the codes and, using their experience and other diagnostic equipment, can get to the root of the problem and fix it. 

As we mentioned before, if that Check Engine light comes on and is blinking, it means a more serious engine malfunction that can damage expensive components such as the catalytic converter and even the engine itself.  It’s important to have that checked by a professional as soon as possible. 

Autotronics of St. Peter
111 Jefferson Avenue
St. Peter, MN 56082
507.934.9290
http://autotronicsstpeter.com