Astral
11-12-2007, 11:51 AM
I recently changed the pads and rotors to Hawk HPS Ceramic and RacingBeat slotted rotors. Bedded in as per Hawk instructions.
I noticed that over time, the rear wheels accumulate three to five times as much brake dust as the fronts. Right now, the rears are covered in red ceramic dust (look like somebody exploded a ceramic flower pot over them) and the fronts are just lightly dusty.
Is this normal? Anyone with Hawk HPS Ceramic pads care to weigh in?
It seems abnormal to me. (Not that I care that much about brake dust, but if this is a symptom of a real problem, I want to fix it).
If so, what could be causing this?
1) Maybe the e-brake is sticking? ... I don't think that this is the case, as there's a normal amount of travel before the e-brake grabs, and the car rolls forward just fine w/o the e-brake applied.
2) Maybe I didn't turn the rear calipers in enough? ... Doubt this too: I was able to put the new full-thickness pads over the new full-thickness rotor without problems. Also, when I began driving, the e-brake didn't actually work until I pumped the brake pedal several times, so I'm assuming that this pushed the calipers back closer to the pad (and so they were turned in enough).
3) Do we have an adjustable brake bias of some sort? Maybe my brake bias is messed up somehow? ...
4) Grasping at straws: maybe the rear rotors weren't bedded in fully because of the front brake bias built into the car, so the transfer layer film is absent on the rears? (Or maybe casual braking wore the film away?) And so that's causing extra wear?
I noticed that over time, the rear wheels accumulate three to five times as much brake dust as the fronts. Right now, the rears are covered in red ceramic dust (look like somebody exploded a ceramic flower pot over them) and the fronts are just lightly dusty.
Is this normal? Anyone with Hawk HPS Ceramic pads care to weigh in?
It seems abnormal to me. (Not that I care that much about brake dust, but if this is a symptom of a real problem, I want to fix it).
If so, what could be causing this?
1) Maybe the e-brake is sticking? ... I don't think that this is the case, as there's a normal amount of travel before the e-brake grabs, and the car rolls forward just fine w/o the e-brake applied.
2) Maybe I didn't turn the rear calipers in enough? ... Doubt this too: I was able to put the new full-thickness pads over the new full-thickness rotor without problems. Also, when I began driving, the e-brake didn't actually work until I pumped the brake pedal several times, so I'm assuming that this pushed the calipers back closer to the pad (and so they were turned in enough).
3) Do we have an adjustable brake bias of some sort? Maybe my brake bias is messed up somehow? ...
4) Grasping at straws: maybe the rear rotors weren't bedded in fully because of the front brake bias built into the car, so the transfer layer film is absent on the rears? (Or maybe casual braking wore the film away?) And so that's causing extra wear?