You have any rust on the rotors in the morning from condensation or rain? You could put it up on jack stands and turn the wheels by hand.
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I don't think so, I drove the truck this morning at 5 am the noise was there in intiial take off and then parked it and it sat for about 4 hours I then drove it again and the noise was there but then it sat for about 30 minutes and I drove it again and it was quiet no noise at all and it is about 30 degrees outsideYou have any rust on the rotors in the morning from condensation or rain? You could put it up on jack stands and turn the wheels by hand.
I'm gonna give this a try this weekend and see what happens I'm hoping it solves my issue but if not I'll have clean brakesI'm sticking with my original diagnosis -- brake pads not disengaging. But the Whonp, whomp whomp still bothers me. If it's the brake pads, pull the wheels/tires, spray the rotors and calipers generously with Brake Clean - readily available at any auto parts store, Walmart, etc, don't worry, it dries very quickly and washes away a lot of crud. Then do a Youtube search for brake pad R&R for your model year truck (or close) just to educate yourself. Next, with the wheels and tires off (driver's side only if that's where the noise is coming from), identify the caliper sliders. Next get some WD40 or any sort of oil lubricant and put a couple of drops in and around where the sliders move. If that eliminate the groaning, then you've solved the issue and can go from there.
Others will have different suggestions, but in my simple mind, this is what I would do --- well not really -- I would wait until it broke, then I'd fix it. That's what my wife always yells at me for.![]()