• brake discs and brake pads questions.........

    From SH@i.love@spam.com to uk.rec.cars.maintenance on Wed Jun 8 19:57:34 2022
    From Newsgroup: uk.rec.cars.maintenance

    I have a VW Golf Estate owned from new in 2016 and on its original set
    of front and rear brake pads.

    Its an 6 spd DSG auto box & diesel blue motion and with an electronic
    parking brake with all teh usual stuff like ABS, ESP, and adaptive
    cruise control.

    the rear pads are much closer to their wear limit than the front pads.
    Is this normal or usual?

    I had thougth the fronts wear quicker than rears, which is certainly
    true for the tyres on it.....

    The car has done 55,900 miiles.

    Most garages are only quoting for front and rear pad replacement.

    So will the current discs last till the next pad change at circa 110k
    and still be above their minimum thickness?

    I am led to believe that if the discs are replaced due to being too
    thin, the pads should also be replaced as well. So what is a reasonable mileage to expect from a set of discs?

    So Should I have the discs replaced while the wheels are off the car and during the pad change or leave the discs well alone?
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  • From Tim+@tim.downie@gmail.com to uk.rec.cars.maintenance on Wed Jun 8 19:35:51 2022
    From Newsgroup: uk.rec.cars.maintenance

    SH <i.love@spam.com> wrote:
    I have a VW Golf Estate owned from new in 2016 and on its original set
    of front and rear brake pads.

    Its an 6 spd DSG auto box & diesel blue motion and with an electronic parking brake with all teh usual stuff like ABS, ESP, and adaptive
    cruise control.

    the rear pads are much closer to their wear limit than the front pads.
    Is this normal or usual?

    I had thougth the fronts wear quicker than rears, which is certainly
    true for the tyres on it.....

    The car has done 55,900 miiles.

    Most garages are only quoting for front and rear pad replacement.

    So will the current discs last till the next pad change at circa 110k
    and still be above their minimum thickness?

    I am led to believe that if the discs are replaced due to being too
    thin, the pads should also be replaced as well. So what is a reasonable mileage to expect from a set of discs?

    So Should I have the discs replaced while the wheels are off the car and during the pad change or leave the discs well alone?


    At that mileage, IrCOd replace them. Discs are softer than they used to be I believe and are considered a disposable item these days. A false economy to hang onto ones that old.

    Odd that your rears are more worn. Suggests sticking callipers as they
    really ought to wear much more slowly than the fronts. Time for a brake overhaul I think.

    Tim
    --
    Please don't feed the trolls
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  • From Roger Mills@mills37.fslife@gmail.com to uk.rec.cars.maintenance on Thu Jun 9 12:13:28 2022
    From Newsgroup: uk.rec.cars.maintenance

    On 08/06/2022 19:57, SH wrote:
    I have a VW Golf Estate owned from new in 2016 and on its original set
    of front and rear brake pads.

    Its an 6 spd DSG auto box & diesel blue motion and with an electronic parking brake with all teh usual stuff like ABS, ESP, and adaptive
    cruise control.

    the rear pads are much closer to their wear limit than the front pads.
    Is this normal or usual?

    I had thougth the fronts wear quicker than rears, which is certainly
    true for the tyres on it.....

    The car has done 55,900 miiles.

    Most garages are only quoting for front and rear pad replacement.

    So will the current discs last till the next pad change at circa 110k
    and still be above their minimum thickness?

    I am led to believe that if the discs are replaced due to being too
    thin, the pads should also be replaced as well. So what is a reasonable mileage to expect from a set of discs?

    So Should I have the discs replaced while the wheels are off the car and during the pad change or leave the discs well alone?

    A sizeable part of the cost of brake replacement is labour so, if you're paying someone to do it, it makes economic sense to replace both pads
    and discs at the same time.

    However, if you're doing it yourself, it's a different matter. In my
    case, the Hyundai dealer wanted over 400 quid for replacing the front
    pads and discs on my Tucson. There was nothing actually wrong with the
    discs - they were well within their wear limits, and not scored. I kept
    the original discs and just fitted new pads at a cost of not much more
    than 40 quid.

    Like others, I think it's odd that your rear brakes have worn more than
    the front one - sounds like they've been binding - and need
    investigating. Have you noticed a detrimental effect on fuel consumption?
    --
    Cheers,
    Roger
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  • From SH@i.love@spam.com to uk.rec.cars.maintenance on Thu Jun 9 13:07:45 2022
    From Newsgroup: uk.rec.cars.maintenance

    On 09/06/2022 12:13, Roger Mills wrote:
    On 08/06/2022 19:57, SH wrote:
    I have a VW Golf Estate owned from new in 2016 and on its original set
    of front and rear brake pads.

    Its an 6 spd DSG auto box & diesel blue motion and with an electronic
    parking brake with all teh usual stuff like ABS, ESP, and adaptive
    cruise control.

    the rear pads are much closer to their wear limit than the front pads.
    Is this normal or usual?

    I had thougth the fronts wear quicker than rears, which is certainly
    true for the tyres on it.....

    The car has done 55,900 miiles.

    Most garages are only quoting for front and rear pad replacement.

    So will the current discs last till the next pad change at circa 110k
    and still be above their minimum thickness?

    I am led to believe that if the discs are replaced due to being too
    thin, the pads should also be replaced as well. So what is a
    reasonable mileage to expect from a set of discs?

    So Should I have the discs replaced while the wheels are off the car
    and during the pad change or leave the discs well alone?

    A sizeable part of the cost of brake replacement is labour so, if you're paying someone to do it, it makes economic sense to replace both pads
    and discs at the same time.

    However, if you're doing it yourself, it's a different matter. In my
    case, the Hyundai dealer wanted over 400 quid for replacing the front
    pads and discs on my Tucson. There was nothing actually wrong with the
    discs - they were well within their wear limits, and not scored. I kept
    the original discs and just fitted new pads at a cost of not much more
    than 40 quid.

    Like others, I think it's odd that your rear brakes have worn more than
    the front one - sounds like they've been binding - and need
    investigating. Have you noticed a detrimental effect on fuel consumption?

    the rear pads have worn the same on both sides, so what are the chances
    of both rear calipers sticking?

    I ha ve not noticed any changes in fuel consumption, i get 650 miles per tankful (i reset the trip mileage meter at every fill up and the onboard computer tells me ave mpg is 52 to 56.
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  • From Brian@noinv@lid.org to uk.rec.cars.maintenance on Thu Jun 9 14:22:29 2022
    From Newsgroup: uk.rec.cars.maintenance

    SH <i.love@spam.com> wrote:
    I have a VW Golf Estate owned from new in 2016 and on its original set
    of front and rear brake pads.

    Its an 6 spd DSG auto box & diesel blue motion and with an electronic parking brake with all teh usual stuff like ABS, ESP, and adaptive
    cruise control.

    the rear pads are much closer to their wear limit than the front pads.
    Is this normal or usual?

    I had thougth the fronts wear quicker than rears, which is certainly
    true for the tyres on it.....

    The car has done 55,900 miiles.

    Most garages are only quoting for front and rear pad replacement.

    So will the current discs last till the next pad change at circa 110k
    and still be above their minimum thickness?

    I am led to believe that if the discs are replaced due to being too
    thin, the pads should also be replaced as well. So what is a reasonable mileage to expect from a set of discs?

    So Should I have the discs replaced while the wheels are off the car and during the pad change or leave the discs well alone?


    I had this on my CRV some years ago. I was told it was common due to muck
    etc and corrosion.

    The front pads were still fine.

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  • From Dave Plowman (News)@dave@davenoise.co.uk to uk.rec.cars.maintenance on Thu Jun 9 15:58:15 2022
    From Newsgroup: uk.rec.cars.maintenance

    I used to reckon on two sets of pads to one of discs.

    But measure the thickness of the discs. Some have that minimum stamped on
    them.


    In article <t7qreu$son$1@dont-email.me>,
    SH <i.love@spam.com> wrote:
    I have a VW Golf Estate owned from new in 2016 and on its original set
    of front and rear brake pads.

    Its an 6 spd DSG auto box & diesel blue motion and with an electronic parking brake with all teh usual stuff like ABS, ESP, and adaptive
    cruise control.

    the rear pads are much closer to their wear limit than the front pads.
    Is this normal or usual?

    I had thougth the fronts wear quicker than rears, which is certainly
    true for the tyres on it.....

    The car has done 55,900 miiles.

    Most garages are only quoting for front and rear pad replacement.

    So will the current discs last till the next pad change at circa 110k
    and still be above their minimum thickness?

    I am led to believe that if the discs are replaced due to being too
    thin, the pads should also be replaced as well. So what is a reasonable mileage to expect from a set of discs?

    So Should I have the discs replaced while the wheels are off the car and during the pad change or leave the discs well alone?
    --
    *Laugh alone and the world thinks you're an idiot.

    Dave Plowman dave@davenoise.co.uk London SW
    To e-mail, change noise into sound.
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  • From Mark@Mark@127.0.0.1 to uk.rec.cars.maintenance on Wed Jun 15 17:00:42 2022
    From Newsgroup: uk.rec.cars.maintenance


    "SH" <i.love@spam.com> wrote in message news:t7qreu$son$1@dont-email.me...
    I have a VW Golf Estate owned from new in 2016 and on its original set of >front and rear brake pads.

    and with an electronic parking brake


    does that work on the rear Pads?

    --



    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From SH@i.love@spam.com to uk.rec.cars.maintenance on Wed Jun 15 17:14:42 2022
    From Newsgroup: uk.rec.cars.maintenance

    On 15/06/2022 17:00, Mark wrote:
    "SH" <i.love@spam.com> wrote in message news:t7qreu$son$1@dont-email.me...
    I have a VW Golf Estate owned from new in 2016 and on its original set of
    front and rear brake pads.

    and with an electronic parking brake


    does that work on the rear Pads?

    --




    yes it does, and when it breaks, it results in an eye watering garage
    bill of over -u1,000 on a previous Passatt.

    Whats wrong with a bit of steel wire and plastic outer sheathed spring?
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