Mike 458 Report post Posted March 8, 2017 I have a feeling this may end up with differing opinions but is it worth having matching front & rear pads? With my limited understanding, I'm thinking having better pads up front will move the bias forward and make the rear a bit more loose as the car will want to sit on it's nose a bit more which would make trail braking a bit more difficult? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
KevinA 695 Report post Posted March 8, 2017 IMO on stock set up, the difference between Street pads is negligible in the real world. With BBK front and rear it is probably more critical, I ran last year with different f to r with no problems. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Bfranklyn86 52 Report post Posted March 8, 2017 I agree with Kevin, based on current experience and the discussion I had with an engineer at AP racing, there is no definitive need to match pads on a stock set up. I run a front BBK and a totally stock rear set up. No issues at all, and the brakes were fantastic at a recent track event. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
nerdstrike 186 Report post Posted March 8, 2017 I guess you won't notice until things get marginal, like brake overheat or down steep hills. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Test Drives Unlimited 278 Report post Posted March 9, 2017 I been advised to go the same all round,but at the moment am running standard Pads at the rear and Hawk Pads at the front and all on standard Discs all around Sent from my ASUS_A001 using Tapatalk Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Ade 517 Report post Posted March 9, 2017 I tried various different compounds on the back of mine when looking at break kits. Going from ±10% vs stock. It does have an effect also so does so many other variables. With all brakes the fronts get much hotter than the back under hard breaking so the pads are running at different temperatures, usually with the hotter fronts running at a lower friction coefficient. When selecting compounds for my front and rear brake kits I measured disc temperature after a track session and use that information to make a better judgment on which pads to use to maintain bias. Not all pad manufacturers will give the information though. Here is the Cosworth Streetmaster pad compound: Hoon around a B road disc might be a similar temps ~150C. Both pads are ~0.42 Now let imagine at the track the fronts run at 700C but the rears 400C. You can see the friction coefficient would be 0.38 for the front and 0.43 at the back. That's a 12% drop in bias. This is obviously a very basic approach, but gives you an idea how a higher temp pad just at the front vs front and rear could actually help maintain brake bias. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TTR 509 Report post Posted March 9, 2017 31 minutes ago, Ade said: I tried various different compounds on the back of mine when looking at break kits. Going from ±10% vs stock. It does have an effect also so does so many other variables. With all brakes the fronts get much hotter than the back under hard breaking so the pads are running at different temperatures, usually with the hotter fronts running at a lower friction coefficient. When selecting compounds for my front and rear brake kits I measured disc temperature after a track session and use that information to make a better judgment on which pads to use to maintain bias. Not all pad manufacturers will give the information though. Here is the Cosworth Streetmaster pad compound: Hoon around a B road disc might be a similar temps ~150C. Both pads are ~0.42 Now let imagine at the track the fronts run at 700C but the rears 400C. You can see the friction coefficient would be 0.38 for the front and 0.43 at the back. That's a 12% drop in bias. This is obviously a very basic approach, but gives you an idea how a higher temp pad at the front vs rear could actually help maintain brake bias. Or screw the bias and let it drift rearwards for that mad trailbraking! 1 Ade reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
KevinA 695 Report post Posted March 9, 2017 Good job there are different styles of driving, you see many race drivers taking speed out and settling the car in a straight line and not trail braking. 1 Ade reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Church 209 Report post Posted March 9, 2017 Or even driving with VSC on, or frequently triggering ABS, further loading brakes a lot. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
S18 RSG 429 Report post Posted March 9, 2017 I just went on the internet and bought new pads. As long as they're better than stock (which they will be), does it really make that much difference? (This is a rhetocrical question) 2 surrey86 and KevinA reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
tristanom 2 Report post Posted March 17, 2017 What they said. I've tried putting different pads on the rear and front, and had no issues. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Test Drives Unlimited 278 Report post Posted March 17, 2017 I just ordered yesterday EBC Yellowstuff Brake Pads Front and Rear via eBay for £118.73 and will be delivered next week Also got Front and Rear OEM Toyota/Subaru Brake Discs on order to put to one side and to take to Germany in October Sent from my ASUS_A001 using Tapatalk Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Bfranklyn86 52 Report post Posted March 17, 2017 How much did you spend on the OEM disks? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Deacon 1357 Report post Posted March 17, 2017 34 minutes ago, Bfranklyn86 said: How much did you spend on the OEM disks? A quote I had was £122.92 front and £116.83 rear. I went with the stoptech plain discs instead. 1 Bfranklyn86 reacted to this Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Test Drives Unlimited 278 Report post Posted March 18, 2017 How much did you spend on the OEM disks? Front = £99.99 Rear = £67.20 From two different Toyota Dealers via eBay Sent from my ASUS_A001 using Tapatalk Share this post Link to post Share on other sites