Just had left rear caliper replaced with a rebuilt unit along with new rear rotors and pads on both sides because I ignored a rubbing sound for too long. (Denial is a powerful force!) Turns out the rotor rubbing against the pads -- and then the metal to metal against the caliper -- ended up being the only thing keeping my axle and wheel assembly on the car because the $5 circlip at the bearing had popped. Eeek!



It was fixed at a local mechanic -- not a Fiat specialist, but competent. Now, a couple of days later, I noticed that the rear hubs are getting hot and that the car doesn't roll quite as easily as it should. Jacked up each corner individually and discovered that the rear wheels are hard to rotate by hand, especially the right, and even the fronts have some minor rubbing. This wasn't the case previous to the rebuild: The car had been easy to push by hand, but it's not so now. The mechanic did bleed the rear brakes and top up fluid.
I suspect too much hydraulic pressure, or something else amiss. I will bring back the car on Monday. What should he look for? Given that he's not a Fiat specialist, could he gave missed something and didn't account for the compensator? Could it be the installation of the pads? Does he just need to dial back the "acorn nut"? I don't know exactly where this is, but I hae seen it referenced and assume it's at the booster or master cylinder...
With many thanks,
phaetn