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The delicate art of breaking in brake pads....
So The Pagdin on the front run great. New rotors with previous pads. Silent.
I replaced rear pads a year back (Texstar), then a month after that, decided on new rotors, rear. The new rotors did come with a small slip of paper saying new pads must be used. I figured since pads were only a month old, that's pretty new. Not..... So now there's a squeak. Always there. Tried resurfacing the pads. Works for a week or so, then same results. Tried Napa Gold pads, rear, since they are very close to my shop. Major squeak, from the 3rd stop on. Resurfaced Texstar pads (on flat ground, perfectly flat with drywall sandpaper) and reinstall. Way better, but squeak is back. Those pads are about 2/3 down now, and I'll buy new pads today. Question is, where do I find the proper break in procedure? Is there any chance I damaged the rotors? Shiny, new, flat. Seem perfect, no discoloration. The squeak is always right at that perfect soft breaking point when you drift to a stop. Anything less or more and it's silent. I have never used any brake sprays or that pad grease. Am I missing something?? THANK YOU!!!!!!!! |
Did my brakes last year - Zimmerman rotors, not drilled or slotted, Brembo pads on the front, Textars on the rear
No squeak, squeal, or any other noise ever. I used the anti-squeal pads that Pelican used to sell, but apparently no longer carry. I'm sure they must be available somewhere else. I broke them in as per directions in some thread in the forum, can't remember which one. Basically, it was a series of long slow stops with medium pressure from increasing speeds, allowing the rotors/pads to cool in between stops. Did about 10 or 12 of these if I remember right. Avoided hard braking/sudden stops for the first couple of weeks. Seems to have worked for me. No 7th round stoppage either! ;) |
Shiny rotors may be glazed. If it were me I'd have at the friction surface with 180 grit and an orbital (or similar) sander just enough to take off the shine. You could have them machined but that would be a waste of the rotor material.
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Also are you using the anti squeal pad inserts that stick to the back of the pads? Just asking because not everyone uses this. |
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Go out on a road where you can get up to 100 mph and you will not encounter any traffic. Go 100 mph and stand on brakes until you hit the ABS. Repeat 3or4 times. Your brakes are now broken in.
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Now I don't do any of that, just drive easy for a few days, then maybe a few hardish stops. no problems or squeals with EBC Red's. |
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So I followed the article linked to the T. I have all new pads. They came out with the color and haze like the article.
Worst squeal ever! Sometimes all 4, sometimes that repeated squeak, squeak, squeak as you drive slow. If cruising slow and even touch brakes, it's really awful. Going to order ceramic and try that today. May be time for some magic no squeal sprays until they arrive. |
I put a thin coat of this on the back of the pads every brake job I do, has always worked for me:
Specialty Lubricants - Anti-Seize : Permatex® Copper Anti-Seize Lubricant |
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It's soo embarrassing to have loud squeaking brakes. :( |
Use this on the back of the pads, then perform the break in procedure where you heat to brakes to fade.
http://i1114.photobucket.com/albums/...ps6d22b113.jpg |
The noise is from a high pitch vibration. The grease is applied on the back and any other contact points on the back and side of the pads, not on the face of the pads of the pads. If they still make noise you may have to grind a groove or a champfer on the face of the pads to help them brake in.
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Used the product pictured above. Silent all the way home. Slight noise as I pulled into my garage but wanted the product to dry overnight before I do the break-in procedure tomorrow.
Thanks for the replies. |
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