Volfy
Some fava beans and a nice Chianti
- Joined
- Dec 5, 2010
- Messages
- 1,496
- Reaction score
- 1,372
- Points
- 113
- Location
- Gulf Coast
- Genesis Model Year
- 2021
- Genesis Model Type
- Genesis G70
I think that is a good approach. I drove on stock pads for about 1-1/2yrs without too much issue. I could see the obvious pad build up on the rotors and occasionally feel the effects when I had to step on the pedal a bit harder than usual. For me, it wasn't even a pulsation, more like just a rough gritty feedback. The braking performance didn't deteriorate and the pedal feel was still quite linear for the most part. Realistically, I could continue to drive (everyday/commute) on them, albeit keeping a close eye on all the rotors. The only reason I swapped the pads "early" was for the Track Day back in October. Besides the stock ceramic pads not being suitable for the much higher temp range at the track, hard braking in an event like that would risk hot spotting the rotors that already have copious amounts of pad material deposit.As a footnote to my previous post about the brake pedal shudder and then the brake smell .......... I have put about 200 miles on the car since this happened and it has not occurred again. Brakes seem fine, in fact, in traffic they are actually doing better and I am not getting that hard 1st gear downshift when slowing down (around 20-15 mph) that has been present on the car since I bought it with 2000 miles on it. I am guessing that the pad build up was causing some jerky braking that was affecting the transmission sensors. It is very smooth now - I can slowly approach a traffic stop and not notice the transmission downshift at all. I had read the other threads with posts about getting the TCU reset and thought that was what needed to be done to mine but apparently the brake pad buildup was so bad it was causing this issue too.
Very odd. I have owned a lot of cars & motorcycles over the years and this is a first for me. Still might change the pads but will hold off for a while to see if the build up happens again.
FWIW, pad compound formulation is ALWAYS going to be a compromise. Despite advances in materials science, any pad compound has a temp range it works best in, and choosing one over another for performance gain in some areas will ALWAYS be accompanied with drawbacks in other characteristics. Those who claim one particular pad is good for all types of driving conditions are either ignorant, or lying... or both.
The stock ceramic pads on the Brembos might be scorn by just about everybody who have driven on them, but the very reason they tend to cause rotor deposit may also be the reason they don't generate much brake dust at all. In the 1-1/2yrs I drove on them (on the Stinger), I was very impressed with just how little brake dust I've had to clean off the wheels. The Eurosport pads on our G70 6MT left no rotor deposits but do generate considerable amount of brake dust. The EBC Bluestuff I have on the Stinger now... effing brake dust city!!! But boy were they brilliant at the track.
Pick your poison.