Author Topic: brake pads  (Read 1081 times)

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Offline jilljoy

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brake pads
« on: March 17, 2011, 22:50:41 »
I have just bought brake pads off ebay.the picture says hh quality but when they arrived there is no mention of hh just sintered metal ceramic carbon material AD.can anyone advise if these will be very good.the brand is gold fren

Offline jilljoy

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Re: brake pads
« Reply #1 on: March 18, 2011, 17:06:01 »
can anyone help because I ordered hh,I will send them back if these are shite

Offline Gassoon

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Re: brake pads
« Reply #2 on: March 18, 2011, 17:43:41 »
Hello jilljoy - I'm not 100 percent on this area, but my understanding is that if it says its sintered it's HH rated, because the more usual, GG rated ones are resin-bonded ?

I also just saw this on the wemoto site...

"Brake Pad Frictional Formulation
Brakes work on the crude principle of friction between two surfaces. To give a uniform measure of the frictional characteristics of a Brake Pad the SAE J866A test procedure is used to give a two character code e.g EE FF GG HH.

HH or GG
•HH Pads These have the highest coefficient of Friction and are ideal for High performance motorcycles and race track use. Some modern performance motorcycles specify HH as standard. HH Pads can sometimes prove grabby, scary in the wet and ineffective in every day use when they fail to reach a good operating temperature.
•GG Pads This grade of Pad is a great all rounder and will perform well in most conditions. GG are softer than HH pads and bed in quicker on worn discs.
•Mixing HH and GG Pads Many manufacturer specify HH for the front of performance Motorcycles with GG in the rear. This is because GG pads can give you more feel and control of the back brake. It is not considered safe to use HH in the rear with GG pads in the front.
Obviously Pads are only as good as the condition of the whole braking system. When first used brake pads can sometimes give poor braking as residual moisture from manufacture process works its way out and the pads bed in. It is best to bed in pads with gentle use and very heavy initial use can result in glazing, a condition where the resins in the pad crystalize with resulting poor performance and squeal."
Hope this helps
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Offline Juvecu

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Re: brake pads
« Reply #3 on: March 18, 2011, 22:28:56 »
I've had some Gold Fren pads all round in the past and I don't recall anything negative about them. They were the same ones you have there: "ceramic carbon, sintered HH". They were quite cheap and I think they are good value for money. I now have EBC HH pads on the front and they have good feel along with the new EBC discs I have on. I have a set of Armstrong HH pads lying in the garage that will go on when the EBC ones are worn out.
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Offline steve...

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Re: brake pads
« Reply #4 on: March 19, 2011, 09:27:33 »
I've had Ferodo Platinum pads on my bike now for a few weeks and Hello are fine.  They're not HH or sintered but the benefit of that is they are smoother, more progressive and work perfectly from cold.  I've had high friction pads in the past and they're great on a track day or for fast road riding on a sports bike but on the V-Strom I wanted something a bit gentler and more appropriate to the riding I use it for but still able to haul me and the bike up fast.

I've had bad experience of EBC pads and discs so no longer buy any EBC product.

Offline jilljoy

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Re: brake pads
« Reply #5 on: March 19, 2011, 11:08:54 »
thanks blokes brilliant advice

Offline Juvecu

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Re: brake pads
« Reply #6 on: March 19, 2011, 16:39:54 »
The first set of EBC discs I had on warped in 6k miles with normal EBC pads on. I complained and got sent a new set without any protest (they also sent me a new set of EBC HH pads.) I was told the new set uses a different metal design for the rotors. When I asked if there was something wrong with the previous metal design it was conveniently ignored and I still haven't had an answer to that question. So far the new rotors are fine and I don't see any sign that they will go the same way.
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Offline 2112

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Re: brake pads
« Reply #7 on: March 19, 2011, 16:54:50 »
I've used gold fren pads before and they're fine. I found they took a while to bed in but were OK after that and lasted well.
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