rougeray Posted June 7, 2014 #1 Posted June 7, 2014 At what mileage are you changing the front brake pads? I have 68,000 on mine and they look good. I have been changing the rears about every 6,000-7,000 miles. I know I use the rears more than a normal driver as I started out riding bikes that had drums and I was always cautioned to not lock up the front. Now I'm riding a bike that has double disks up front and should be used more than the single rear, plus this is one heavy scoot! Not only that most of my riding is on flat ground. Not to many mountains here in south Louisiana. Also does anyone have the plastic cover that goes on the rear caliper?
Seaking Posted June 8, 2014 #3 Posted June 8, 2014 I installed EBC HH Sintered pads on mine 70K miles ago and the front have lots of life left to them. (solid braking, less noise than the OEM pads before). The rear ones were recently swapped left to right as the inside pad always wears down before the right one, this allows more life out of them. But the rear pads will soon need to be replaced after a while. I use a lot of heavy rear brake in slow speed advanced manouvers in demos on the advance courses and every day slow speed manouvering. 68K on the front sounds right but wow, only 7k miles on the rear sets?
djh3 Posted June 8, 2014 #4 Posted June 8, 2014 Sounds pretty short on the rears to me. I presently have over 17K on mine and just did the rotate inside to outside for probably another 5K anyways.
Riderduke Posted June 8, 2014 #5 Posted June 8, 2014 I get about 10K on my rear brake Pads......I've got 103K on the front brake pads and They are still good....... several people have checked them and Yup at 103K they are still ok.....
Whistler Posted July 31, 2014 #6 Posted July 31, 2014 Changing for fir:cool10:st time anything I should know like how to do it
MikeWa Posted July 31, 2014 #7 Posted July 31, 2014 I tend to drag my rear brakes a lot also. Especially in parking lots etc. So their life span is short. Mike
Seaking Posted July 31, 2014 #8 Posted July 31, 2014 I just changed mine a couple of days ago.. maintnance records show they have 25K miles on the rear.. I'm heavy on the rear brake for advance rider demos and such. I did flip the pads a while back which help even out the wear.. I did however find that one of the inside pistons was stuck and took a little more effort to push it back (bleed valve open). I guess a rebuild is in order this winter.
bongobobny Posted August 1, 2014 #10 Posted August 1, 2014 Seeing as you have twice the braking area in the front it stands to reason they will last a lot longer than the rear! It's normal to brake a little harder in the rear unless you like nose diving into a stop. From what I've read here it is normal to replace the rears around 10K or less if you use the rears more than the front. 70K is outstanding for the front. I think those plastic dirt covers are still available. They are the same ones for the 1st gen MK2 as well, same rear caliper and also used on the fronts...
bmxndad Posted August 1, 2014 #11 Posted August 1, 2014 My mechanic chewed me out for out using rear brakes so much. Since then have not had to change out either ends. 30,000 miles ago.
vzuden Posted August 2, 2014 #12 Posted August 2, 2014 Just changed my rear pads for the first time at 31,000. Fronts still have half or better left. I did switch the rear side to side once at around 20,000 to even them out
Bodaggit23 Posted August 2, 2014 #13 Posted August 2, 2014 At what mileage are you changing the front brake pads? I have 68,000 on mine and they look good. I have been changing the rears about every 6,000-7,000 miles. What rear tire do you run that outlasts brake pads with that kind of heavy braking? I'd think the rubber would wear far sooner than you'd have to replace pads, unless the caliper is dragging. I've been on bikes since I was 4, 50cc Indian with training wheels. As far back as I can remember I was always told the front brake has 70-80% effective braking and the rear only 20-30%, which is why there are two calipers and discs on the front and a single on the rear. I mainly use the front brake and engine deceleration. First thing I do is drop a gear and drag the front brake a tish. That's generally all I need to slow down 90% of the time. It's a very good thing to get used to how your front brake feels and reacts. Plus it shifts a lot of normal wear to the front tire instead of picking on just the rear. I think that's why most people change rear tires and brake pads every year but still have the same old crusty pads and dry rotted OEM tire on the front.
Neil86 Posted August 2, 2014 #14 Posted August 2, 2014 Changing for fir:cool10:st time anything I should know like how to do it Whistler...you have a PM
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