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|    rec.autos.tech    |    Technical aspects of automobiles, et. al    |    117,728 messages    |
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|    Message 115,919 of 117,728    |
|    N8N to Steve W.    |
|    Re: What metric do you use to estimate r    |
|    10 Aug 20 11:10:15    |
      From: n8nagel@gmail.com              On Sunday, August 2, 2020 at 12:28:48 PM UTC-4, Steve W. wrote:       > Arlen Holder wrote:       > > On Fri, 31 Jul 2020 14:04:50 -0700 (PDT), trader_4 wrote:       > >       > >> Every pad I've installed for decades has had them, including the ones that       > >> use electric wear sensors.       > >       > > How many miles do you get per front pads, in general?       > >       > > As for mechanical sensors, my bimmer has only one wear sensor per axle       > > o No mechanical sensor; only electronic (front left and rear right).       > >       > > Although electronic is essentially mechanical, since it's a stub of plastic       > > that wears on contact, exposing the wires embedded inside that plastic.       > >       > > One issue is removing the sensors often breaks them if you're not careful.       > >       > > Since we rotate so frequently, checking brakes are easy; but this question       > > was for estimating miles for someone else who doesn't rotate as frequently       > > as I do (due to mountainous terrain causing specific "camber scrub" wear to       > > the inboard corners of the front tires).       > >       > > At the moment, with the data we have, it's about 4,000 miles per pad mm.       >       > There is no rule of thumb for brake wear because it depends more on the       > driver, vehicle location and the pad materials than anything else.       >       > Drive out in the plains where the only hills are long and low and the       > brake wear is going to be much different than if you live in the       > rockies. Same with driving in New York City versus San Fransisco.       >       > Another factor is the vehicle itself and how it is set up. Some will       > chew through brakes fast while others barely nibble. Some will go       > through brakes in 40K or less while others might make it to the junkyard       > on the OEM rears pads.       >       >       > The Journey we have had all the brakes done by the dealer with OEM       > parts prior to our purchase, They have about 55K on them and the fronts       > are worn maybe 1/2 way. The rears however were just replaced, but not       > for wear, the rotors rusted into junk and damaged the pads. So it got       > new NAPA coated rotors and premium ceramics to see how they work on it,       > have had very good service from them on many other vehicles.       >              Another factor is riveted vs. bonded linings, you can run a bonded lining a       lot thinner than a riveted one. 5mm might be thiiiiiis close to grinding the       rivet heads.              nate              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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