Volfy
Some fava beans and a nice Chianti
- Joined
- Dec 5, 2010
- Messages
- 1,523
- Reaction score
- 1,411
- Points
- 113
- Location
- Gulf Coast
- Genesis Model Year
- 2021
- Genesis Model Type
- Genesis G70
Yeah, prying on the rotor/pads like that is cringe-worthy. At the very least, take out the tension clip first. you have to anyway.
I always clean and polish the pins to shiny & slick before reinserting. Plus, wheels off would be a perfect opportunity to clean the purdy Brembo calipers spic & span. It's my own car and my own relaxing weekend driveway therapy. Understand he does this for a living and time = money.
FWIW, I don't goop anything behind the brake pad backing plates. On some cheaper cars, brake pad tolerances can be excessive, and that can lead to pad vibration/noise. Putting some dampening compound on the backing plates could help quiet them down. It's not really supposed to be "grease" anyway, but a high-temp polymer compound that remain pliable after curing. As long as you get top quality replacement pads for these Brembos, where the tolerances are tightly controlled, that is not necessary.
These 1-piece monbloc caliper - especially the 4- and 6- piston ones - apply a much more even pressure on the brakes pads. This allows the pad-to-caliper-rail fit to be tighter and the pad movement more controlled. Single-piston floating calipers are generally less so.
I always clean and polish the pins to shiny & slick before reinserting. Plus, wheels off would be a perfect opportunity to clean the purdy Brembo calipers spic & span. It's my own car and my own relaxing weekend driveway therapy. Understand he does this for a living and time = money.
FWIW, I don't goop anything behind the brake pad backing plates. On some cheaper cars, brake pad tolerances can be excessive, and that can lead to pad vibration/noise. Putting some dampening compound on the backing plates could help quiet them down. It's not really supposed to be "grease" anyway, but a high-temp polymer compound that remain pliable after curing. As long as you get top quality replacement pads for these Brembos, where the tolerances are tightly controlled, that is not necessary.
These 1-piece monbloc caliper - especially the 4- and 6- piston ones - apply a much more even pressure on the brakes pads. This allows the pad-to-caliper-rail fit to be tighter and the pad movement more controlled. Single-piston floating calipers are generally less so.


