Pads, rotors, calipers, hydraulic lines, ABS diagnostics — Rogers Franklin inspects free, quotes in writing, and stands behind every brake job with a nationwide warranty.
Our Franklin shop has been Meridian's quiet brake specialist for years — first under the Blue Wrench name, where the careful inspection-before-quote approach built a loyal customer base, and now as part of the Rogers family. We see a lot of Meridian and Eagle drivers here whose vehicles spend serious time on stop-and-go arterials, which means brakes wear faster than average. Free inspection, written quote, OEM-grade pads — that's the formula. Walk-ins welcome every day.
Brakes are not the place to cut corners. A squeak you ignore for six months turns into a $1,200 rotor-and-caliper job that should have been a $250 pad replacement. Rogers Tire & Auto Care has been doing brake work in the Treasure Valley since 1978, and our approach hasn't changed: free brake inspection, written quote before we touch a thing, OEM-grade or better parts, and a 24-month / 24,000-mile nationwide warranty on every qualifying repair. We tell you what's actually wrong, what's safe, and what's not — and we never sell you a job you don't need.
Our brake program covers the full system: pads and rotors front and rear, calipers and slide pins, hydraulic lines and master cylinders, ABS and traction-control diagnostics, parking brake adjustment, and brake fluid service. We work on every make and model — domestic, import, light truck, and heavy diesel — with the same standard. If you've been told you need a $2,000 brake job, bring us the quote: we'll inspect for free and tell you honestly what we'd charge.
Bring it in any time for a free brake inspection — we pull the wheels, measure pad thickness, check rotor condition (warpage, scoring, minimum thickness), inspect calipers and slide pins for binding, check hydraulic lines for leaks, and test the parking brake. You leave with a written report and, if anything needs doing, a quote in writing before we order parts. No diagnostic fee for brake work.
Brake pads are the wear item — they'll need replacement every 30,000–70,000 miles depending on driving, brake material, and vehicle. Rotors can usually be resurfaced if there's enough material left; otherwise they're replaced. Calipers can stick or seize from corrosion (especially on Idaho winter-driven vehicles) and need rebuilding or replacement. We use OEM-grade or premium aftermarket parts — never the cheapest pad on the shelf — and torque every fastener to spec.
Brake fluid is hygroscopic — it absorbs moisture from the air over time, which lowers its boiling point and can cause brake fade under hard use (down a mountain pass, towing). Most manufacturers spec a brake fluid change every 2–3 years. We test fluid moisture content, replace if needed, and inspect the master cylinder, lines, and hoses for leaks while we're in there. Squishy pedal? Often a fluid or hydraulic problem, not a pad issue.
ABS warning light, traction-control fault, electronic stability code — these are diagnostic jobs, not 'replace something and see if the light goes out' jobs. We use platform-specific scan tools to read brake-module codes, test wheel-speed sensors with a scope, and check the integrity of the brake hydraulic and electronic control units. Real diagnostics means the fix actually fixes it.
Daily drivers, work trucks, RVs and motorhomes, light commercial — we service them all. We do high-performance pad upgrades for tow-vehicle owners, ceramic pads for the lowest-dust street use, and heavy-duty pads for Powerstroke/Cummins/Duramax owners hauling real loads. Tell us how you use the vehicle and we'll recommend the right pad.
Front pads and rotor resurface: typically $220–$380 per axle. Front pads and new rotors: $320–$560 per axle, depending on parts. Caliper replacement: $250–$500 per caliper installed. Full brake job (pads + rotors front and rear): $600–$1,100. Hydraulic work, ABS diagnostics, and master cylinder service quoted separately. We inspect free and quote in writing — no surprises.
Most pads last 30,000–70,000 miles. Driving style is the biggest factor — stop-and-go commuting, mountain driving, towing, and aggressive braking all shorten pad life. Idaho's mix of city, highway, and elevation puts brakes in the middle of that range. We check pad thickness at every multi-point inspection so you know what's coming.
Depends. If rotors are above minimum thickness, smooth (no deep grooves), and not warped, we can resurface them and put new pads on. If rotors are below minimum, badly worn, or warped, they need replacement. We measure and tell you — we don't automatically replace rotors to pad up the bill.
Front or rear pads-and-rotors: usually 1–2 hours. Full four-wheel brake job: 2–4 hours. Caliper replacement: 1–2 hours per caliper. Hydraulic work (master cylinder, lines, bleed): 2–4 hours. Most brake work is same-day; we'll give you a realistic time before you commit.
Don't ignore it. The brake warning light can mean low fluid (could be a leak), parking brake stuck on, or a pad-wear sensor triggered. The ABS light can mean a wheel-speed sensor fault or hydraulic problem. Bring it in for a free inspection — we'll find the cause before it becomes a safety problem.
No. Magnuson–Moss Warranty Act protects you from warranty voids when you use an independent shop. We use OEM-grade parts, document every repair, and our records integrate with CARFAX — so the work travels with your vehicle.