Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hi guys,

My car off at my mechanic's joint this morning for a service and a once over before the SAUNSW MDTC day on the weekend.

I would normally do the above myself, and with plenty of time to spare. Unfortunately I have been 'stuck' (for want of a better word!) at Bathurst for the last 2 weeks...

Aanyway, so it seems i need new pads and rotors as my spanner man thinks the pads might not last the day.

Im just going to get him to throw some RDA slotted and Bendix Ultimates on it

So, whats the best way to have the brakes bed in and ready to run for Sat morning? I am going to drive the car down to Marulan from Syd (2 hour drive)- if i give them a bit of welly on the way down will that be enough?

Cheers

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/374078-last-minute-padrotor-change/
Share on other sites

Haha bendix ultimates at the track, they won't last the day, maybe 3/4 of a day if you're lucky.

When I change my pads at the track, I just drive normally and take it easy (but still hard on the brakes) the first few laps, then they're completely bedded in.

Best to follow the manufacturers method of bedding in, whether it's the rotor's or the pad's manufacturer.

What I do on empty roads is, get up to 40, lock it up to full stop, drive around for acouple minutes to let things cool down, again but 60 this time, finally at 80 and drive at least for 5 minutes to prevent thermal shock.

I've used bendix ultimates for heaps of track days and they were fine. Good in fact. Not a race pad but a very good street/track compromise

Bedding in the pads is simple (I'm assuming they've installed and cleaned everything OK).

Head out somewhere open and do 4-6 stops from about 80 to 20 (not to 0....) with the windows down. You will smell when they are warm enough ;) Once they are nice and hot do one more stop, and then drive the next 5 minutes without heavy braking to allow the brakes to cool evenly.

Yes you do want them to be very hot (compared to normal) to bed in. There are 2 things to acheive:

1/ burn off any coating on the pads

2/ distribute the pad material across the disc.

You need to do this ASAP when the new brakes are on, if not they will not bed in or spread there material properly and you will have to start again. If you do have to start again, take the pads out and rough them up on a grinder or even a concrete surface.

Best to follow the manufacturers method of bedding in, whether it's the rotor's or the pad's manufacturer.

What I do on empty roads is, get up to 40, lock it up to full stop, drive around for acouple minutes to let things cool down, again but 60 this time, finally at 80 and drive at least for 5 minutes to prevent thermal shock.

i'm sorry but this goes against everything i've seen and had recommended by any brake 'expert'. you do not want to be locking brakes during bedding in (it will just give you hot spots on the disk at best). you also should not be doing hard stops to a complete stand still. coming to a full stop does the same as locking the brakes, it just leaves a big deposit of pad material and/or hot spot in one place on the disk.

as duncan said you want to start by doing 80-20 maybe 2 of those, then bump it up a bit (obviously only if safe to do so) like 110km/h to 20 and 2 or three of those (with some cooling time in between), then drive normally at decent speed for 5-10 mins without using the brakes (again if safe to do so). doing it on the freeway is fine but check your mirrors carefully as you don't want to get rear-ended at 20km/h in a 110 zone. you will be able to smell them quite strongly and they may even smoke a little bit. there's no need to get them super hot (like glowing red to the point they are about to catch fire) but they need to be progressively (but quickly) brought up to temp and then progressively cooled afterwards.

this can be done easily on the track in just 1 or 2 laps. but better to do it sooner rather than later as you want to burn off some of the coatings/release agents and like duncan said you are transferring a layer of pad material/resin onto the rotor face.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • There's restrictor pills in the stock boost control hoses. That's how they set the amount that was bled off and hence the "high" boost setting. The usual mod in the day was to remove it and send the "high" boost setting up to about 14 psi.
    • Thanks Duncan, that's the best info I've read. Furthermore after learning about the PCM programming side controlling the factory boost solenoid, the purpose of the solenoid is to "bleed" boost when pin 25 is earthed, thus allowing spring pressure in the wastegate actuator to overcome diaphragm boost pressure, thus closing or reducing the position of the wastegate flap creating more boost as the turbo is able to spin faster. It's pretty cool to see a designated Pill to do exactly this, would have liked to have seen it with a tiny filter over the end for those moments in vacuum.  The constant bleed pill has now been removed completely from the system and solenoid boost control has been restored once again.   Case closed 😂
    • The wideband reading is meaningless if it's not running. Why are you using shitty old sidefeeds on any engine, let alone a Neo? What manifold and fuel rail are you using to achieve that? Beyond that, can't help you with AEM stuff as I've never been their ECU/CAS combo.
    • Manual boost controllers (where a little of the boost was bled off) were quite common back in the day, because they were cheap and easy. Generally they had a manual adjustment screw rather than being fixed like yours. Down side is they always bleed boost, not just when you want them to so an electronic boost controller that uses a solenoid will have less lag.
    • Hello , im new here and i have A31 home build  RB25det neo stock eng / turbo  aem ems 2 blue connector  aem 3.5 map aem cas disk aem wideband connected to ecu  355 lph pump 550 nismo yellow injectors side feed aftermarket regulator  and won’t start with base aem tuner basic tune eventually flipped cas 180 degree so it triggers on correct stroke not in exhaust cycle  Now it won’t start Wideband reads 10 and 11 at lowest fuel setting  and will share calibrations soon for aem tuner i think something is wrong in aem tuner    please if you have any information, am very grateful         
×
×
  • Create New...