I read the posts about how easy changing the front pads were, and never doing so on anything larger than a dirt bike, I bought the performance friction pads and went for it.
Very simple indeed, it took me 1 hour for the drivers side and then 1/2 hour for the passenger side. Only tools needed are the lug nut socket and the torx bit (t10 I think) for the caliper pins. I used air tools for both.
The thing that bothered me was the wear rate on the pads. On the passenger side, they wore very evenly and were at about 30-40%. On the drivers side however, the outside pad was about 50% and the inside was about 10% at the top of the pad and less than a millimeter from 0 at the bottom. The squeal marker had been used all the way and I was withing a few miles of metal to metal and ruining the rotor. I found this myself after the dealer that rotated my tires the week before told me I was at 15% left, and should look into brakes in the near future.
The dealer said that the drivers inside pad always wears fastest because it is the closest to the master cylinder. Is this correct, or was it more likely a binding pad ?
I'll be keeping a closer eye on this in the future.
Very simple indeed, it took me 1 hour for the drivers side and then 1/2 hour for the passenger side. Only tools needed are the lug nut socket and the torx bit (t10 I think) for the caliper pins. I used air tools for both.
The thing that bothered me was the wear rate on the pads. On the passenger side, they wore very evenly and were at about 30-40%. On the drivers side however, the outside pad was about 50% and the inside was about 10% at the top of the pad and less than a millimeter from 0 at the bottom. The squeal marker had been used all the way and I was withing a few miles of metal to metal and ruining the rotor. I found this myself after the dealer that rotated my tires the week before told me I was at 15% left, and should look into brakes in the near future.
The dealer said that the drivers inside pad always wears fastest because it is the closest to the master cylinder. Is this correct, or was it more likely a binding pad ?
I'll be keeping a closer eye on this in the future.