04-12-2024, 07:50 AM | #45 |
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Prepare to have your minds blown:
Where do you think the material from the rotors goes when they wear? The air. Where do you think the material from the pads goes when they wear? The air. Where do you think this nasty hot, gassy air goes? Wherever it can. Mystery solved.
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04-12-2024, 09:35 AM | #46 | |
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04-12-2024, 09:39 AM | #47 | |
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04-12-2024, 11:06 AM | #48 |
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I went with the 2000s and I love them. Dust is still better than OEM but for me the squealing was the most important thing I wanted fixed. Bite is great!
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04-12-2024, 11:07 AM | #49 |
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04-12-2024, 03:03 PM | #51 |
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Can’t recall exactly but it was $250-300 I believe, which was actually less than I had been quoted from some reputable Indy shops.
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04-12-2024, 03:17 PM | #52 |
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Nice! Guess I should have said most dealerships won't do it. I know there are some out there that are pretty mod friendly.
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04-12-2024, 10:29 PM | #54 | |
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I’ll probably do this and my aftermarket stuff at Eurocharged. Only $180 an hour there. |
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04-13-2024, 01:57 AM | #55 | |
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"Most of the dust is coming from the rotors... " they say. That's no the way it works here fellas...
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04-13-2024, 08:20 AM | #56 | |
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Everything in my post is true. Nothing in the post is false.
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04-13-2024, 08:47 AM | #57 | |
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Clever, nope. |
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04-13-2024, 09:42 AM | #58 |
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My road bike, which also uses disc rotors, is covered in similar brown dust around the brakes after just one ride.
I have to swap those tiny pads out every 1-2 months, depending on how much I ride and descend. There is maybe 2mm of pad material not including the backing plate. For reference, the rotor when new is about 2mm in thickness also. They recommend replacing it when it reaches 1.5mm. If the theory that "most dust comes from the rotor" was correct I'd be replacing rotors every 1-2 months and not just pads. After a solid year of ~15-17 hours a week of riding, the rotor is still thicker than 1.5mm and does not need to be replaced. I know it's not an apples to apples comparison, but you get the idea. |
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04-13-2024, 09:48 AM | #59 |
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Back to these pads, is the consensus that the 1500s give up a slight bit of initial bite, but dust the least? And the 2000s have the same or better initial bite, dust less than stock, but dust more than the 1500s?
That initial bite performance is really important to me. I wonder if I should forget the 1500s and get the 2000s instead. Are there any performance downsides to the 2000s for street use?
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04-13-2024, 09:58 AM | #60 | |
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04-13-2024, 12:02 PM | #61 | |
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04-13-2024, 12:20 PM | #62 | |
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04-13-2024, 04:00 PM | #63 |
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Because some people can do basic math and see that 1 mm off the rotors is a lot more material than 1 mm off the pads. How dusty the pads are is not coincidentally proportional to bite. The ratio varies but clearly the rotor is a large contributor, especially if you consider CCB and PSCB brakes where the rotor is extremely hard and does not wear much yet the pads are not that far off normal brake pads and there is almost zero dust.
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04-14-2024, 08:38 AM | #64 |
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I’m not experienced/smart enough to understand all the interactions regarding rotor/pad hardness, composition, surface area, etc. outlined by Chris.
Quite frankly, it really doesn’t matter to me so long as my G87 brakes well and I’m not cleaning wheels every 3 days. The pad switch was a good decision for this owner. YMMV |
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04-14-2024, 11:33 AM | #65 |
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Man just looking at most brake pads and understanding their makeup will lead one to understand most of the dust is coming from them.
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