Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Brake pad change - Use Copper ease?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Brake pad change - Use Copper ease?

    Do people put anything on the back of pads anymore?

    I used to have some Ceratec somewhere, does anyone rate it?

    Should i just use Copper Ease / Antiseize grease?

    Is the CTC pink stuff just snake oil?

    #2
    If you keep the components clean (caliper, pins, rotor locator bolt), there shouldn't be a need for anything. Adding anything to the working assembly is a good way to retain abrasive road grit.

    I'm amazed at the caliper, wheel hub etc. corrosion I see on some brake photos here.

    Comment


      #3
      Copper antiseize is not to be used according to textar (or any type of grease with solids/metal or whatever they called it. Use synthetic grease for this purpose on the pins/slides. Antisqueal is optional, on a new clean system probably not needed. I use some on the back of the pads and no problems, completely silent. This time I didn’t use any and they are mostly quiet but squeal just a bit. Not enough for me to redo it.

      Comment


        #4
        OP is talking back of pads. Some pads come with a teflon-like material on the pad back so if yours have it, good to go without adding anything. If its just painted steel backing, then I'd do a whiff of caliper grease where the round piston contacts the backing.
        '05 M3 Convertible 6MT, CB/Cinnamon, CSL Airbox&Flap, PCSTuning, Beisan, Schrick 288/280, SS V1's & 2.5" System, RE Stg 1&SMF, KW V2, CB PS, Apex EC-7R

        Comment


          #5
          yeah use an anti-squeal paste (the grease type not the tacky stuff)

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by jbfrancis3 View Post
            OP is talking back of pads. Some pads come with a teflon-like material on the pad back so if yours have it, good to go without adding anything. If its just painted steel backing, then I'd do a whiff of caliper grease where the round piston contacts the backing.
            My textars have the backing, they still squeak a little. I'd use it either way unless all the components are new/pristine.

            Comment

            Working...
            X