Pad Brake 44-52-0965 - OEM Milwaukee - eReplacementParts.com
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Pad Brake 44-52-0965

OEM part for: Milwaukee

Part Number: 44-52-0965


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Pad Brake - 44-52-0965:Milwaukee 360 View
Pad Brake - 44-52-0965:MilwaukeePad Brake - 44-52-0965:MilwaukeePad Brake - 44-52-0965:MilwaukeePad Brake - 44-52-0965:MilwaukeePad Brake - 44-52-0965:Milwaukee 360 View
In Stock
Ships within 1 business day
Easy Less than 15 minutes (11 rated repairs)?
OEM: Original Equipment Manufacturer ?
Milwaukee
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Product Description ?

This is a genuine Milwaukee replacement part, It is sold individually.
This part controls the random orbit functions of of the Milwaukee sander it is used on.
If this part breaks or gets worn, the sander will operate poorly and the pad will rotate at a high rate of speed.

  • Classification: Part
  • Weight: 0.10 lbs.
  • Shipping: Ships Worldwide

Frequently Purchased Together ?

Compatibility

This part will fit the following 1 machine

Milwaukee

6021-21 (SER B19A) 5" Random Orbit Palm Sander View Diagrams & Manuals
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This item works with the following types of products:

  • Sander Parts

Customer Part Reviews ?

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Average Rating (out of 5):
11 Reviews
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  • Good item and fast delivery.
    The replacement part are good.
    carmelo - October 19, 2022 Verified Purchase
    Product
    Arrived promptly and was the correct product
    Anonymous - June 14, 2022 Verified Purchase
    Easy repair
    Shipped as stated and fit as expected.
    Guest - December 23, 2021 Verified Purchase
    Exelent
    Perfect
    iGlobal - October 2, 2021 Verified Purchase
    Great pad brake
    I thought this part had something to do with the sanding dust. I had no idea it was a pad break until the one on my sander fell apart. I ordered the part by looking at a picture and found out it was a break for the orbital disk. The part came in a few days and was easy to install it works great! This is a great company to order parts from!
    Guest - June 21, 2021 Verified Purchase
    Fast delivery
    First time using this place. I had trouble with my Milwaukee sander spinning too fast. Some of the other reviews pointed to the pad brake. I order a few, arrived early in 3 days, an it worked great. Factory parts.
    Guest - February 8, 2021 Verified Purchase
    good site to clearlyt find the part you need
    I've used this site many times to find the part I need. I quickly found the part I needed here and received it in just a few days. Great site to get parts and the information from other users.
    Michael - April 20, 2020 Verified Purchase
    easy fix, fit perfectly.
    sander is working great.
    Guest - March 31, 2020 Verified Purchase
    Perfect
    Arrived earlier than stated. Part fit perfectly. Would definitely buy from them again.
    Guest - January 4, 2020 Verified Purchase
    great web page
    Brake pad and bearing for orbital sander. Fast delivery, easy install, and works perfect. Thanks for a great web page
    Guest - October 9, 2019 Verified Purchase
    t
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    t - t days ago Verified Purchase
    eReplacementParts Team
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    Questions & Answers for Pad Brake


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    Customer Repair Instructions ?

    All our customer repair instructions are solicited directly from other customers just like you who have purchased and replaced this exact part.

    Easy Less than 15 minutes (11 rated repairs)?

    Pad brake wore out

    Eric - August 8, 2016
    👍 3 of 3 people found this instruction helpful
    Tool Type

    Sander

    Difficulty

    Easy

    Time

    Less than 15 minutes

    Tools Used

    Screwdriver

    I removed the bottom sanding disc 4 screws. Removed the plastic housing around the sanding disc 6-8 screws. took out the old brake, slid the new brake in. Replaced all the screws.
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    Orbital Sander brake was not working

    James - September 11, 2020
    👍 1 of 1 people found this instruction helpful
    Tool Type

    Sander

    Difficulty

    Easy

    Time

    Less than 15 minutes

    Tools Used

    Screwdriver, Torx screwdriver

    Removed pad and side panel of body case, removed old brake and replaced. Very easy repair if you have the right size torx screwdriver. Also replaced dust bag and o-ring.
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    Sander wound"nt sand properly & acted like it had a counter balance effect

    Bruce - October 29, 2019
    Tool Type

    Sander

    Difficulty

    Easy

    Time

    30-60 minutes

    Tools Used

    Screwdriver

    Replaced the pad break, as the raised flanges were worn down flat. completed the repair by replacing the dust bag, locking ring & compression spring. Rebuilt to be new again!
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    The pad brake on my orbital sander disintegrated. I didn't know what the part was, but the parts diagram here showed me what I needed.

    Patricia - July 11, 2019
    Tool Type

    Sander

    Difficulty

    Easy

    Time

    Less than 15 minutes

    Tools Used

    Screwdriver

    I'm a newbie at diy repair of tools but this one was very straightforward: took off the velcro sanding pad (4 phillips screws in my Milwaukee orbital sander. Then I saw that I needed to take a few more out so that I could fit the pad brake in place (torx screws). The longest part of the repair was removing the gunk that had built up in the holes for those 3 screws. Then I put the brake in place, making sure it fit properly into the slots, screwed everything back together and got back to sanding. It was probably 5 minutes of digging junk out and 2-3 minutes putting it back together.
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    Excessive speed, and poor quality of the finished wood.rem

    Wallace - February 8, 2018
    Tool Type

    Sander

    Difficulty

    Easy

    Time

    Less than 15 minutes

    Tools Used

    Screwdriver

    Removed shroud and dust collector
    Unscrew hook and loop pad
    Remove old worn brake
    Insert new parts and reverse process....Easy Peezy
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    The sander pad disintegrated from age.

    Jim - August 3, 2017
    Tool Type

    Sander

    Difficulty

    Easy

    Time

    15-30 minutes

    Tools Used

    Screwdriver

    The replacement pad price was good, delivery prompt.
    The old pad was removed with a screwdriver and the new one replaced.
    I replaced the brake since I ordered it without knowing the old one was OK.
    Part of the housing had to be removed to install the brake.
    Sander works like new again.
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    Pad brake worn out

    Scott - April 29, 2017
    Tool Type

    Sander

    Difficulty

    Easy

    Time

    Less than 15 minutes

    Tools Used

    Screwdriver

    Removed pad. Removed 4 screws. Peeled off old brake. Pressed tabs from new brake into base.(That's the hard part.) Milwaukee and Craftsman are the same procedure. DeWalt is way easier and pad brakes last way longer. Haven't had to replace one on the Bosch yet after two years. Replaced pad screws.
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    My random orbital sander was running full bore, no randomizing.

    Cody - May 23, 2016
    Tool Type

    Sander

    Difficulty

    Medium

    Time

    15-30 minutes

    Tools Used

    Screwdriver

    Remove the pad. Remove the bearing/pad mounting bracket. There is a screw with a collar that hold the bearing against the drive spindle. Also use a small flat top screw driver through one of the vent holes in between the fins of the suction to keep the spindle from turning so that you can remove the hold down screw. Place the bearing plate on two small pieces of wood with the center open, take a socket that will fit in the center hole and cover most of the exposed bearing. Using a hammer, drive the old bearing out. Insert the new bearing in the recessed location, using the hammer tap around the plate to seat the bearing flush with the mounting plate. It has to be flush or the pad won't align properly. The rest kind of depends on the make and model of your sander.
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    Pad break wore out causing pad to spin at high speed when lifted from work piece.

    Scott - April 25, 2016
    Tool Type

    Sander

    Difficulty

    Medium

    Time

    Less than 15 minutes

    Tools Used

    Screwdriver

    Take three screws out of pad and separate old brake from sander base. Getting the rubber fingers to go back in the slots was the tricky part. Milwaukee and Craftsman built the same. DeWalt much simpler and longer lasting. Haven't had to replace the one on my Bosch yet. Hmmm....
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    The brake pad of my Milwaukee 5” ROS had worn out, to the point that if was falling apart.

    Kevin - August 29, 2023
    👍 0 of 1 people found this instruction helpful
    Tool Type

    Sander

    Difficulty

    Easy

    Time

    Less than 15 minutes

    Tools Used

    Screwdriver, #1 slotted screwdriver

    After removing the sanding pad by removing the four Torx screws in the bottom plate and removing them and the pad.
    I then removed what was left of the original brake pad and positioned the new pad in place. It easily fit into the slots, with the exception of the last two, or three.
    They required a little coaxing with the blade of a #1 slotted screwdriver.
    I then replaced the sanding pad and secured the four screws.
    Holy cow! What a difference the new brake pad made! No more over speeding of the disk when it’s removed from the work surface, and the disk stops spinning much faster when turning the sander off.
    The part cost was very reasonable and the shipping was very fast.

    I’m incredibly happy with my purchase! 😄

    Thanks, e replacement parts! 😉
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    OEM stands for Original Equipment Manufacturer and means the part you’re buying is sourced directly from the manufacturer who made your product. At eReplacementParts, we sell only genuine OEM parts, guaranteeing the part you’re purchasing is of better design and of higher quality than aftermarket parts.

    Our product descriptions are a combination of data sourced directly from the manufacturers who made your product as well as content researched and curated by our content & customer service teams. This content is edited and reviewed internally before being made public to customers.

    Our customer service team are at the ready daily to answer your part and product questions. We have a dedicated staff with decades of collective experience in helping customers just like you purchase parts to repair their products.

    All our part reviews are solicited directly from other customers who have purchased this exact part. While we moderate these reviews for profanity, offensive language or personally identifiable information, these reviews are posted exactly as submitted and no alterations are made by our team.

    All our customer repair instructions are solicited directly from other customers just like you who have purchased and replaced this exact part. While we moderate these reviews for profanity, offensive language or personally identifiable information, these reviews are posted exactly as submitted and no alterations are made by our team.

    Based on data from past customer purchasing behaviors, these parts are most commonly purchased together along with the part you are viewing. These parts may be necessary or helpful to replace to complete your current repair.

    All our installation videos are created and produced in collaboration with our in-house repair technician, Mark Sodja, who has helped millions of eReplacementParts customers over the last 13 years repair their products. Mark has years of experience in selling and repairing both commercial and residential products with a specialty in gas-powered equipment.

    This data is collected from customers who submitted a repair instruction after replacing this exact part. Customers can rate how easy the repair was to complete and how long it took. We aggregate this data to provide a repair rating that allows customers to quickly determine the difficulty and time needed to perform their own repair.

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