Brake Pad Bed In
#1
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Brake Pad Bed In
When I first got my brake pads, I noticed a nice bluish layer transferred onto my rotor when I bedded the brake pads in. Now after some street driving, that layer is gone. Should I bed in my brake pads again before heading back out to the track? Or is it a one time thing you do with new brake pads?
#4
Street driving on race pads (especially aggressive ones) effectively resurfaces the rotors. You are more or less grinding off the surface and your pad transfer. For maximum performance, you should re-burnish them.
-Rob
-Rob
#6
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the bluish tint comes from the heat generated by burnishing new pads. almost any type of aggressive pad material will take off some transfer film during street driving, even street/autox/light track pads such as ax6 or hp+. although i hope you're not driving around with full race pads. like rob said, all you need to do is re-burnish them and you're good to go. or, you can just drive to the track and burnish them there which would be much easier and safer.
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#10
Read this:
http://www.stoptech.com/tech_info/wp_bedintheory.shtml
Basically, the bluish tint is going to be the transfer layer from the pad onto the rotor. street driving the brakes means they don't get hot enough to transfer material and instead the transfer layer gets worn away by friction.
What I would do, I wouldn't bother bedding them in again on the street. But when you get to the track, just be aware that you're not going to have ideal braking during your first session since your brakes will be working on putting a new transfer layer onto the rotors.
http://www.stoptech.com/tech_info/wp_bedintheory.shtml
Basically, the bluish tint is going to be the transfer layer from the pad onto the rotor. street driving the brakes means they don't get hot enough to transfer material and instead the transfer layer gets worn away by friction.
What I would do, I wouldn't bother bedding them in again on the street. But when you get to the track, just be aware that you're not going to have ideal braking during your first session since your brakes will be working on putting a new transfer layer onto the rotors.