Ok, I think I may have found/fabricated a fix for my brake calipers.
This is my post on Facebook:
For my mechanic friends. As I have complained about before, the rubber boots that my boat trailer brake caliper slider pins work through, tend to disintegrate after longer travel. I suspect they are simply burning up from the heat generated by the disc brakes. I have yet to get a reply back from Dexter. I don't care to buy more expensive calipers that have steel bushings, so decided to see if I could make or buy bushings to fit in place of the rubber ones. Lo and behold, I found some bronze bushings that appear to fit. 3/4" x 1/2" and 1 1/8" long. From Amazon:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00MND8R5W...
After sanding the outside of the bushings lightly, and cleaning the inside of the caliper bracket where they go, I was able to press them in with a vice. The slider pin seems to go thru them easy enough, with very little free play. For now, they are open, that is no dust boot on them, but I feel that dust can get in from the brake side, so no use trying to cover the back side. I'm hoping these work, but does anyone see any problems that I've overlooked? I plan to install these brake calipers on one axle and see how they do, before replacing the other two on the other axle.
If you go to the first or second page of this thread, you can see photos of the rubber boots, and how they start to disintegrate.
Here are some photos of the bronze bushings in place of the rubber boots.
A mechanic friend of mine suggested placing some kind of rubber cap or something over the bronze bushing to keep dust and grit out. I may have to do a little more fabrication to place some form of protection around both ends of the bronze bushing. But for now, I'll just see how they work without any dust seal. Colby