canucklehead604
one of the few 6MTs...
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2018
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- West Coast Canada
- Genesis Model Type
- Genesis G70
...read through the thread.Hi All - I'm new here. Have had my 2020 G70 3.3T AWD for a few years now and just came to the point of needing to replace my pads and rotors (pulsation in the front and back and the pads are thinning).
Dealership and a local tire shop both quoted me around ~$2300 for parts and labor for all OEM parts. Are there any agreed upon cheaper aftermarket options that won't strongly affect performance?
Any help is much appreciated, thanks!
That's insane. I would consider half of that number to be close for all four sets of pads and rotors. Sheesh.Hi All - I'm new here. Have had my 2020 G70 3.3T AWD for a few years now and just came to the point of needing to replace my pads and rotors (pulsation in the front and back and the pads are thinning).
Dealership and a local tire shop both quoted me around ~$2300 for parts and labor for all OEM parts. Are there any agreed upon cheaper aftermarket options that won't strongly affect performance?
Any help is much appreciated, thanks!
Hey, would you mind letting us know how you managed changing the rear pads, with the electric parking brake? It's supposed to be put on some kind of 'service mode', but maybe there's a way around that without the diagnostic tool to do that. Just curious. It'd be greatly appreciated if you could post the procedure you used, to know if it's possible to change them without that step. Thank you.Ordered a set of Hawk Performance HPS 5.0 pads (front and rear) from knsbrakes.com ($220 for all 4 corners). Will install this weekend
That's where I hope the ThinkDiag (recall the other thread we have been talking on) comes in. It offers (in theory, have to see if it will work on my G70) the ABS bleed function.Hey, would you mind letting us know how you managed changing the rear pads, with the electric parking brake? It's supposed to be put on some kind of 'service mode', but maybe there's a way around that without the diagnostic tool to do that. Just curious. It'd be greatly appreciated if you could post the procedure you used, to know if it's possible to change them without that step. Thank you.
Agree on flushing out the old fluid. I read that Audi recommends fluid replacement every 2 years.I've got a couple of motorcycle-specific OBD2 utilities that have ABS bleed functions. GS911 for BMW and DealerTool for Triumph. While they are nice to have, bleeding the trapped fluid behind the ABS valves isn't absolutely necessary. For one thing, the volume of trapped brake fluid isn't great, compared to the rest of the system. Also, while being trapped and isolated does prevent that volume of fluid from being bled out, it also means that it isn't exposed to moisture contamination, like the rest of the open lines.
Regardless of whether the ABS bled function is available or not, it is far more important that the rest of the brake system fluid is refreshed. We just bled our '21 G70 6MT, using good ol' fashion manual pump-n-dump. The original fluid was still basically clear. Not surprising, since we've only had it for a year. But, with a couple of track days coming up, where we'd be doing multiple 25min track sessions each, I didn't want to take any chances with old fluids in the system. Wet fluid boiling point can be substantially lower than dry. We went with racing DOT4 brake fluid that has dry boiling point close to 600F.
This YT vid is good for visualizing the trapped fluid:
Did you use a diagnostic scanner when bleeding the brakes? From what I remember, you need to put the vehicle in a special mode via a tool before bleeding.I installed the Hawk Performance HPS 5.0 pads this weekend on my G70 Design Editions (with electronic parking brake). Here’s what I found:
No “service mode” was required for the brake pad swap and rotor dismount. All I had to do was make sure the parking brake was off before turning the car off.
Resurfacing the rotors was simple: i used a DA grinder/buffer with a 120 grit sanding pad - as directed by the Hawk Performance pad install instructions.
Brake bleed was done (fluid that came out was about the same color as the new fluid, so it must have been done before I bought the car last year) in the normal manner, with the variation of having to bleed first the inner then the outer bleed screws.
Once I have a couple of hundred miles on the new pads I’ll report back with my impressions.