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Leon wrote: smear grease an inch thick all over the disc ....
Bazda wrote:Did you machine the discs before you put them in?
Wait till you race it, the brakes are gona over heat big time , then there will be no noises.
siren676 wrote:When I got my greenstuffs they came with a rubber sheet which you cut out and stick to the back of the brake pad.
Maybe you could find some of them?
phoenix wrote:I've always found that with squealing (road) pads you just sand the edge between the pad surface and the side a little.
Usually just doing the leading and trailing edge should work - some pads are made with ramped sections on those parts to prevent squealing.
Bazda wrote:That stuff is useless, lasts like 1 hard stop and melts away.
The adhesive is only rated to 200C.
Its more for road users.
Rhys & his father both cooked their twinpot SS brakes once they got their driving sorted and really starting pushing their cars.
They went through various pads he told me.
His dads car is an ae82 so thats even lighter.
He just had a session out last weekend on the Wilwoods and he recons they are magic, no comparison to the ss ones. Braking 20-30m later.
And that was only with a road/race pad not a full race .
Id never race on stock brakes lol. I like to brake late and feel safe doing it
~SlideWays~ wrote:phoenix wrote:I've always found that with squealing (road) pads you just sand the edge between the pad surface and the side a little.
Usually just doing the leading and trailing edge should work - some pads are made with ramped sections on those parts to prevent squealing.
Thats interesting!
crispy'86 wrote:~SlideWays~ wrote:phoenix wrote:I've always found that with squealing (road) pads you just sand the edge between the pad surface and the side a little.
Usually just doing the leading and trailing edge should work - some pads are made with ramped sections on those parts to prevent squealing.
Thats interesting!
Had this exact trouble at work when we fitted some new pads, someone didn't chamfer the edges, pulled pads out did this, refitted them and noise gone.
crispy'86 wrote:~SlideWays~ wrote:phoenix wrote:I've always found that with squealing (road) pads you just sand the edge between the pad surface and the side a little.
Usually just doing the leading and trailing edge should work - some pads are made with ramped sections on those parts to prevent squealing.
Thats interesting!
Had this exact trouble at work when we fitted some new pads, someone didn't chamfer the edges, pulled pads out did this, refitted them and noise gone.
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