BRO TELL ME ABOUT IT NO MATTER HOW MANY TIMES I RING MY BELL, SO FEW PEOPLE LEAVE. BUT WHEN I FUCKIN SWEAK MY BREAKS, THEY START PANICKIN AND LEAVIN LIKE YEAH FOCK YOU
@thenuckinfoob01 Shimano pistons are finicky at best... And hack videos like this just make more work for bike mechanics (so maybe I shouldn't comment, that way I get more work 😉)
Been doing it for years this way, never had an issue. I pushed back maguras, hopes, shimanos and srams and never had a piston-related issue. Just gotta have a feel for it can't be forcing it too much.
Plastic levers rather than metal is going to prevent huge problems. That was the first thing that caught my eye. Also, mine were contaminated and new pads worked for me.
@@WayStedYouI’ve got a pushbike in the shed and I’ve never done this, heard or seen of it being done. It isn’t a common thing for the average pushbike owner to do.
@@OpticMoos Just cuz it isn't common doesn't mean it isn't basic. Most people will just live with squeaky brakes rather than go out of their way to properly maintain them.
@@henryvalbuenabaez6915 please think of the people living in these cities :( there were already enough noise without all those squeaky bikes :( I just heard another one by the time it took to write this comment ...
@@henryvalbuenabaez6915i just hang a bluetooth speaker on my handlebars and set the volume so u can hear it about 10 feet away while surrounded by loud vehicles. Classical music, metal, drum and bass, lets drivers who are blind to anything that isnt a car know im near.
Great, now you’ve got reduced braking efficiency until the rotor re-acquires a coating of pad material and the pads wear enough to conform perfectly with the tramlines in the rotor surfaces. The noise is generated by the leading edge of the pad “grabbing” the disc. The pad then sets up an oscillating motion within the caliper which creates the noise and increases wear rate of the pad and caliper thrust faces. To avoid or cure it just file a 45 degree chamfer on the leading edge of both pads (the edge that a point on the rotor would meet first when travelling forwards). Then apply a just visible trace of copper grease to the pad backplate surface where it contacts the piston or caliper body, but not to it’s edges. The chamfer avoids the initial grab that sets off the resonance and the copper grease provides a small measure of damping and isolation medium to change the overall system’s resonant frequency. This is something that used to be taught to every apprentice mechanic back in the 70’s when disc brakes started to become commonplace on vehicles. It works, it also gives a much more progressive feel to the braking action, avoiding “grabbiness” on initial application of the brake.
@@joelcelinder9545I changed both disc (different shape) and pads at the front. The noise came back after 500km😢 efficiency iscalso decreasing. Rear side remains silent.
@@taboutte You might have either stuck pistons or the pads are glazed. Glazing often occurs when the disc is new and rough, or when braking very little and very delicately. No proper bedding in. To fix it sand the pads, then find the steepest hill you can and ride it down making strong stops from high speed only using the front brake. Or you can also drag the brake behind a car or something until you start losing power or the pads start smoking. Stuck pistons, well, ask a Sram brakes owner.
I like your fix ...it confirms my suspicions...very similar to toeing in rim pads. I'll give it a shot. Sanding and cleaning is a very temporary fix, maybe 2 rides if it works at all.
As someone who works in a bikeshop i can tell you - in most of the cases unfortunately that doesn't work - it may helps for maybe 1 Kilometer but after that the Sound is back. If you use instead of a heatgun a blowtorch and burn the pads until they nearly start to melt then grinding them down a bit then i works most of the time but for the time you spent - cost of the tools and may accuring safety issues (maybe it loosens the glue between metallpart and the Brake Material) - you just can buy new Brake Pads thay cost just 5-10 bucks each...
I didnt know what to expect when following your steps but it actually helped immensely. Not only is the squeal gone, but the braking force is now 3x compared to what it was before. Great hack. thank you big time mate.
A hack would be like a 3 sec fix, by spraying, or adding something to the breaks, or doing a minor adjustment to remove the squeaky sound. This is just normal maintenance. Either way, its good instructions for maintenance and its satisfying to watch.
he could've just sent it down a massive hill, and held the front brakes tight until it burnt all the contaminants out. the brakes would be fine after that.
Brakes pads work by transferring part of the friction material onto the rotor. It’s all part of the bedding in process. By sanding the rotor you just reduce the braking efficiency until they bed in again ( and start to resonate once more)
Actually, the resonating is caused by dust that did not adhere to the disc surface. So clean the dust from the pads and discs with a clean cloth. That's all. No sand paper or blow dryer.
@@damianchristopher205 I think grease would be more efficient. WD40 just dries too quicky. Who has the time to lube the brake disc and pads once a week?
I just pull the pads out. Wipe the pads and rotor down with break cleaner. Blowtorch the pads for a couple of seconds then put them back. Works every time. If needed to fix them in the field, find a slope, pedal hard down hill while breaking. High heat is the key.
"works every time".. and this is the problem, that it repatadly is coming back :) I dont care about the sound anymore.. too much work for something you get back within a few rides.
@@bronsonstephens5799 you can only get the oils in the pads to go away by burning them. you need the pads to get hot enough to ignite the oil that's contaminating them.
@@bronsonstephens5799 it is not to burn up residue, but new pads have to be "burned in" so they wont squeak so soon. This creates something like a "matching pattern" on both the pad and rotor. If sand and contamination ruins this, noise starts. If you do not "ride in" the pads, you will brake hard 1-2 times and your brakes will start squeaking again. Some shops have machine for this to do it in a minute. Good videos on youtube how it is done "manually" on a hill or if you have some legs, on the flat.
legit. did the same thing with my ebike and I was so happy the squeak was gone the first 3 times I tested it but as soon as I rode home and had to brake it was back 😭 I need to buy new pads I tried it for a while by going down the steepest hills i could find and by repeatedly doing a full on emergency brake while going fast and after like 45 minutes I noticed the squeak was gone, i can brake the bike to a stop without squeaking, but I still need new pads
This actually works well. I had a customer, who pumped his calipers full of grease to make them quieter. I took the challenge, torched the pads and rotor with a torch after degreasing. Bike stopped great after.
@@alexzbarazky3038 I've had mixed luck. I've done alcohol soaks, hit it with some flame, squeal out, sandpaper, brake cleaner, you name it. I've done it for customers and told them I wouldn't charge for the service and if the problem persists to come in for new ones. Some swear it worked and I'll see them on a trail or on the road and some people don't even make it out the door before they started screeching and honking.
@@alexzbarazky3038the rotor is made of an anti-friction alloy and it deteriorates when overheated, so you need to be extremely careful when heating the rotor
LOL i thought at the end of the short they were still going to squeak. I have tried all this stuff and they end up making noise after soon after.... Now I just ride...
@@cataplt depends on the pads and the level of contamination. My friend's shimano pads cleaned up just fine, my tektro pads didn't get all that much better
@@cataplt Thing is, the pads have to coat there residue over the brake discs to work. There cant be any contamination on the discs of other things. If the brake pads have been coated in...idk mineral oil from the brake system there toast. Other then that follow the steps below. Go in gear 1 Pedal while braking pretty hard. You feel the bike isn't really slowing down a lot but it makes a ton of noise. Keep going. Let slowly loose of the brake while still in motion every 30 sec or so, for few seconds and break again (to let the disc cool a little). Go brake on and now you should feel the bike slowing down a little more while still making noise. Press the break a little less. Now you should feel it getting stronger and stronger and letting more loose of the brake. When the noise is pretty much gone. Bike around do this thing above like 3 times between some cycling around and the noise should be gone.
And because here it looks easy and fast and it's usable only in specific cases, it's usually cheaper and way more effective to actually replace both pads, try to clean the rotor and cook out using strong braking force the little rest of debris on the rotor. Changing pads + clean up= 2-3mins, alignment and brake test downhill near the shop = 2 mins. Customer who wants to continue riding is finished in 5-6 mins when everything goes smooth = satisfied customer. In many, many cases, cleaning the rotor could be done only with specific tools on a angle grinder, everything else is useless. And no, spraying the degreaser is waste. And doing it with sandpaper is only possible in very small scale when you have loads of time and is far less effective because of the principle of brakes itself.
that's easy fixed with some fine clay in water, just coat the rotor in a thin coat & the pads bed in instantly. I prefer the yellow clay that we have in some of the hilly parts of Yorkshire, but any of the finer natural boulder clays should do it.
If you get brake cleaner on the calipers or forks it can remove the paint and damage the protective finish. 30 seconds of work to pull the pads out to clean them. Or better yet just replace squeaking pads.
Shimano Hydraulics are extremely easy to rectify if there’s any brake rub. The tough ones are Magura as the disc is often so thick that the tolerance for smooth running is very small, in fact near impossible when the brake pads and discs are both brand new
depends on the brake. BR-4770 and BR-RX400 have almost no clearance in them, so it's nearly impossible to get them to stop rubbing when new. they do get a bit better after being broken in.
I had to teach my lady something similar about wiper blades. We were driving in the rain for hours and the wipers started making noise and she thought she had to change them again, only a few weeks in… I stopped at a filling station (gas station for my US gang) and I cleaned the windshield and the wiper blades and everything was back to normal
I clean my wipers all the time(I live in the NW) and it helps so much especially with the water on the roads splashing up that has dirt/oil in it which really gets them dirty
Guy also resurfaced the pads and cross-hatched the rotor. It’s a good tip. Takes the glazing off the pads and rotor which is what causes the squeak. I’ve done it on a wet clutch on my race bike when I was having issues with slipping and it cleared that issue right up. Grabs like nobodies business
Just a FYI you should always sand against the pad path. Going with will create grooves that could and will groove your pads. Going against will aid in grip and also allow the pad to knock down the high spots over time.
This is a good point! I like to spin the wheel and move the sand paper in and out across the braking surface while it spins, it creates a criss-crossing wave type pattern. This is what we do with vehicle rotors when they've just been cut on a lathe.
Little side-note: don't push the pistons back with al wrench, prefer something softer, like a plastic tirespoon. Shimano uses in some of the calipers ceramic cups! Ceramic cups wil break and will leak.
The handful of times I've had to resurface my pads, I used a sanding screen so the material could fall away from the pad surface and not be ground back into it. Doing that eliminated the need to clean and heat the pads in every case.
I find most of my brake noise goes away just by wiping down the rotor with some alcohol. I would consider this a level 2 procedure. If you resurface the pads/rotor, you'll also want to make sure the pads are bedded in properly too.
@@IRIS.3111 The rotor can be cleaned off with solvent. For the brake pads, you'll need to remove them from the calipers, then using some pliers to hold them, cook off the contaminants with a propane torch.
Use copper grease on the back of the pad, ie where the pad contacts the cylinder. Obviously this needs to be done very carefully. I haven’t had any squeak since I started doing this.
This is done on motorcycles as well. This is the proper way to remove squeaking. Squeak is just a vibration. The grease helps the pad moving freely against the cylinder and the vibration is not generated. The copper grease just lasts longer on the pad. Can't believe this is so low in the comments
@@radelpaul11 I don't think there is aluminum on any part of the calipers, nor on the pads, nor on the pistons, if on the caliper itself . Maybe some brakes have them but I've never seen one
That almost never works! Most squeaking comes from the disk and pads, NOT the disk to cylinder contact face. Source: 30 years of trying different things on various machines
El problema de ruido se soluciona limpiando pero también es porque las pastillas están rozando el disco de forma dispareja y se debe centrar correctamente la mordaza.
a faster way to break the glaze is to ride downhill, then grab the single brake hard, then release quickly so you either don't flip or lock up the wheel. Do it several times if needed.
I one-hundred % agree with this procedure. The only thing I will be very careful with is using a plastic lever to push the pads apart. I recommend you put the pads back in and use a plastic tire lever to push the pistons back into the caliper. Other than that, this is excellent video advice. And I’m a professional bicycle mechanic for over 40 years.
Yes, it will work good while it is in your service, but when your client will warm up pads while riding , pads will release grease that is hidden inside and noise and weakness will be back. Best way to solve this problem - buy new pads and clean rotor, if you can't do it try to put your old pads in a boiling water for a while.
Через пол часа максимум скрип вернётся. Тут только замена колодок и тщательная очистка диска щеткой со стиральным порошком (в том числе в отверстиях диска), до состояния чистой воды и щетки. Иначе вся грязь из отверстий будет на ваших новых колодках.
Господа, вы же в курсе, чем по сути является скрип колодок при контакте с тормозным диском? Причина появления этого звука одинакова как в автомобильных колодках, так и в велосипедных. Наберитесь терпения, сейчас будет очень нудное повествование... Контактные поверхности пары колодка-поршень это металл, причем на колодке этот металл имеет эмалевое покрытие, предотвращающее контакт с металлом поршня. При торможении колодка ложится на диск/ротор и при не плотном прилегании к нему начинает вибрировать, что в совокупности с износом(отсутствием) эмали на обратной стороне колодки приводит к микротрению в паре поршень-колодка. Слышимый скрип это результат трения металла о металл и лечится восстановлением термостойкой и износостойкой эмали либо нанесением термостйкой, консистентной смазки на обраную сторону колодки. Прокаливание и зачистка рабочей повехности колодок, как отчищение диска/ротора, делается для удаления загрязнений, что в свою очередь уменьшает дополнительный износ пары колодка-диск/ротор, что в свою очередь позволяет избежать износа диска/ротора, что позволяет сохранить пятно контакта колодки большим и стабильным, что позволяет избежать появление шумов при торможении. Всё😊
Even new brakes can squeak. It’s good practice to clean rotors and degrease pads before installation, and that’s half of what was done in this video. Doesn’t hurt to surface polish/sand the rotors and pads to remove any rough spots from handling, shipping, manufacture imperfections/poor tolerances.
In the 70s, my disc brake pads were sprayed with a substance that eliminated brake pad squeaking, and also removed the small metal pieces that squeak when the pad gets worn down. He knew I checked the brake pads.
NEVER USE TOOLS WITH OUT THE PADS IN ON CERAMIC PISTONS! If you don't have the pads in you will Crack your pistons. Trust me, I cracked 2 of mine that way.
@@NonLegitNation2 yes lol, those 4 pod xts are a nightmare to work on, as those pistons just break when you look at them... I think even the deores have ceramic if I'm not completely blind... I thought the 4 pod 6120 I have lying around have ceramic, but I'm not completely sure... And those are not really pricey.
And those shitty ceramic pistons even crack with the right tools, even with pads in, without pads and with plastic lever, they always crack... Doesn't matter what you do, you have to press them back in straight, if they go in just a little bit crooked, they are gonna break. Really annoying to get the shards out again, right mate? 😂
@@ironeinar Yeah, really annoying. in my case, I got a set of 8120s for free, so I didn't mind as much, but the shards were everywhere! the hardest part was getting the ceramic dust out of the fluid ports where the mineral oil would normally flow, a good bleed kit and an air compressor got the job done!
@@owenadair8893 yeah thats so annoying, im happy that I dont have to encounter this problem on my personal brakes, because I run Shigura, but my boss in the shop, who serviced hundrets of ceramic pistons still has problems not breaking the pistons while pushing them back in xD
Никаких натираний наждачкой диска! Просто протираем бензином/растворителем. А вот колодки лишь слегка чистим и прокаливаем (пока дымить будут). Ничего не разрушается. Три года назад делал так себе. И год назад доче. Совет мне этот дал один хороший товарищ.
Yeah. Sure. A company that has been making brakes and most other bike components for decades with thousands of engineers - should learn from a guy on the internet. Actually the pin works fine. It's not doing much - it's not actually holding the pads against the braking force (as you'll notice, none of car brake pads have a hole for either a pin or a screw). The holding is done by caliper body. Some of earlier brakes - for instance, the well-famous Avid Juicy series (3, 5, 7, Carbon) - didn't have a pin or screw at all - relied solely on placement of the pad in the caliper body and the metal spring. One of my bikes has these since 2005 - still work like a treat, even with abusive lack of maintenance.
@@JurisKankalis Cotter pins are a consumable item, they don't last forever. A good screw will last for as long as you take care of it. My bike has pads that are held in with a screw and it works like a charm.
@@lorraineschofield123 what is a castle nut and what is the cotter pin for? lol the cotterpin is to keep the nut from fully backing off. it does nothing to hold hubs or bearings.
Organic or metallic pads contaminated with grease are rarely able to be fixed. Even with acetone and sanding, the contaminant has likely soaked throughout the whole thing and the problem will reoccur after some more wear. Don’t expect this to work all the time. If you attempt, use tons of acetone and let them soak for a long time, multiple times.
Anyone else notice that the caliper he is working on is the Shimano m355 which is one of the most common caliper for failing and leaking this method is a short term fix as soon as you hear the pads up the oil will draw out of the pad material and the rotor is discolored by the oil it has absorbed and the same thing will happen as the pads they will become contaminated on the surface
The solution for me was one I wasn't expecting at all. I performed a brake bleed and the squeal from my front rotor disappeared. I'd tried all the typical solutions before and had given up on the issue. However I performed the brake bleed and the noise went away. My theory is that air in the line was preventing my brake pads from making contact as hard as they should which is now no longer the case.
You don't need brake cleaner, rub the pads together with washing up liquid under warm water, then rinse with boiling water, leave to dry. Only sand if they have bad grooves. Isopropyl alcohol for the discs.
This is good craftmanship and the short is nicely detailed. Well done my friend. What is the beatgun for tho ? I guess it's for more than evaporate the brake cleaner ?
This doesn’t work unless the squeak is caused by a slight contamination. Usually the brakes squeak when the pads have not been bedded in properly. The only solution is new pads and bed them in properly. If that’s the case
Use a steel sanding block tome sure that the pads contact surface is level. Also, use automotive brake clean, it evaporates quickly and won't leave behind any residue. For the rotors, don't sand them, you can put a directional pattern into the rotor and then you'll get chatter from the pads and prematurely wear them out. Brake clean and a 3m scrub pad (or a brown cookie in a drill) will be better.
You can burn the pads with a torch, it will burn all the oil away and leave them like new without losing pad material. Dont forget the deep clean the rotor too.
this mostly happened for rear ones. you can clean them, go hill down on full break (rear) and noise will come back anyway - must be contamination within.
I like my maguras that have the pads accessible from the top. Saves a little time. You'll still probably have to align your caliper. I use the alignment tool that slides between the pads and rotor. 👍
I like my squeaky brakes, they are more effective at getting people out of my way than using the bell.
BRO TELL ME ABOUT IT
NO MATTER HOW MANY TIMES I RING MY BELL, SO FEW PEOPLE LEAVE. BUT WHEN I FUCKIN SWEAK MY BREAKS, THEY START PANICKIN AND LEAVIN LIKE YEAH FOCK YOU
Звук бензопилы на гудке тоже классный эффект даёт)
😂
Yeah, after I heard the sound, I wondered why people should waste resources and time. He is literally causing wear and tear.
lol
They aren't hacks. It's called proper maintenance! And use a plastic tyre lever on the caliper pistons, so you don't damage them...
First you need work with vilinders while pads ar in. And then you can work with special metal tool.
@thenuckinfoob01 Shimano pistons are finicky at best... And hack videos like this just make more work for bike mechanics (so maybe I shouldn't comment, that way I get more work 😉)
Been doing it for years this way, never had an issue. I pushed back maguras, hopes, shimanos and srams and never had a piston-related issue. Just gotta have a feel for it can't be forcing it too much.
@@godcorrupt I'd agree, if you know what you're doing. But these "hack" videos are usually aimed at less than competent mechanics...😉
Plastic levers rather than metal is going to prevent huge problems. That was the first thing that caught my eye. Also, mine were contaminated and new pads worked for me.
The overuse of the word hack is a crime against humanity
In the overuse of the word "bespoke" is also a crime
I know this is really old but referring to anything you don’t like is a crime against humanity is also very stupid.
Agreed. They should look up its meaning in a dictionary..
Perhaps you should get out a little more...
He don't know actually how to clean disk break
bro described basic maintenance as "hacks"
Lmao
Next changing your oil in your car is gonna be called a "not blowing up your engine hack"
@@WayStedYouI’ve got a pushbike in the shed and I’ve never done this, heard or seen of it being done.
It isn’t a common thing for the average pushbike owner to do.
@@OpticMoos Just cuz it isn't common doesn't mean it isn't basic. Most people will just live with squeaky brakes rather than go out of their way to properly maintain them.
@@DaniTheGunsmith that’s exactly my point! So it is actually a hack.
Calling it a hack makes it seem more appealing for people to do
I usually spray the rotors and pads with WD-40. Completely removes the squeak.
Lmfao that first hill is always fun
Complete f00l is like applying oil to the brakes. Even when they work because of FRICTION!
@@SniperSnake50BMG lmfao 🤣 the joke went right over your head
@@grxygxds yeah. There was other dude that said he put grace to the rotors...
I did it… such a dumb…
"Do this after every ride and you're golden."
Time waste doesn't equal "hack"
Sarcasm?
@@SOUPBOY1972No, modern bicycles require 27 hours of maintenance for every one hour of flight. They’re true marbles of engineering
My Avid,SRAM brakes squeaked like hell regardless, Shimano no problem.
One drop of oil and boom pads garbage lol
I kinda like the sound of the elephant trunk brakes, it’s a good warning as well to other people
Booga booga 🐘🐘
So am I. Let it sing!
@@ВасилийКоровин-г9эMAN SHUT UP!!! 'FORE YOU MAKE ME DO SUM' I'M GON' REGRET!!!
😂😂😂😂😂😂
Yea I was MTB at a MTB park and everybody was looking at me because of my brakes ❤❤🎉
But I like the free horn sound 😂
It could be useful in cities
@@henryvalbuenabaez6915 please think of the people living in these cities :( there were already enough noise without all those squeaky bikes :(
I just heard another one by the time it took to write this comment ...
@@henryvalbuenabaez6915 Is*
@@henryvalbuenabaez6915i just hang a bluetooth speaker on my handlebars and set the volume so u can hear it about 10 feet away while surrounded by loud vehicles. Classical music, metal, drum and bass, lets drivers who are blind to anything that isnt a car know im near.
I had a BMX with super squeaky brake once. It really announced my presence everywhere I went 😅
Great, now you’ve got reduced braking efficiency until the rotor re-acquires a coating of pad material and the pads wear enough to conform perfectly with the tramlines in the rotor surfaces.
The noise is generated by the leading edge of the pad “grabbing” the disc. The pad then sets up an oscillating motion within the caliper which creates the noise and increases wear rate of the pad and caliper thrust faces.
To avoid or cure it just file a 45 degree chamfer on the leading edge of both pads (the edge that a point on the rotor would meet first when travelling forwards).
Then apply a just visible trace of copper grease to the pad backplate surface where it contacts the piston or caliper body, but not to it’s edges.
The chamfer avoids the initial grab that sets off the resonance and the copper grease provides a small measure of damping and isolation medium to change the overall system’s resonant frequency.
This is something that used to be taught to every apprentice mechanic back in the 70’s when disc brakes started to become commonplace on vehicles.
It works, it also gives a much more progressive feel to the braking action, avoiding “grabbiness” on initial application of the brake.
Or the more likely case is that some contaminant is on the pads or disc or both.
@@joelcelinder9545I changed both disc (different shape) and pads at the front. The noise came back after 500km😢 efficiency iscalso decreasing. Rear side remains silent.
@@taboutte You might have either stuck pistons or the pads are glazed. Glazing often occurs when the disc is new and rough, or when braking very little and very delicately. No proper bedding in. To fix it sand the pads, then find the steepest hill you can and ride it down making strong stops from high speed only using the front brake.
Or you can also drag the brake behind a car or something until you start losing power or the pads start smoking.
Stuck pistons, well, ask a Sram brakes owner.
I like your fix ...it confirms my suspicions...very similar to toeing in rim pads. I'll give it a shot. Sanding and cleaning is a very temporary fix, maybe 2 rides if it works at all.
So sorry you're still stuck in the 1970s.
As a bike mechanic my preferred method is running up the nearest big hill and just holding the brake the whole way down. Works a dream most cases.
Yeah, I do that and it's flawless. Just warm a little and full power again.
Kansas hates you.
My laziness led me to believe this would work. Glad to hear that a professional agrees 😊. Thanks
That's a great way to glaze your brakes
Ahahahahah. NO
As someone who works in a bikeshop i can tell you - in most of the cases unfortunately that doesn't work - it may helps for maybe 1 Kilometer but after that the Sound is back. If you use instead of a heatgun a blowtorch and burn the pads until they nearly start to melt then grinding them down a bit then i works most of the time but for the time you spent - cost of the tools and may accuring safety issues (maybe it loosens the glue between metallpart and the Brake Material) - you just can buy new Brake Pads thay cost just 5-10 bucks each...
Probably depends on how much contaminant the pads absorbed. My results where mixed, sometimes it works, sometimes it doesnt.
$5-10 bucks where you getting your pads?
-edit: oh I see now cheap amazon knock offs
Why not just use rim breaks? I understand the benefits of discs on mountain bikes but I don’t see the need on road bikes.
Pro tech here too. This vid has some many red flags. 😂😂😂
Especially for this brakes model I also think that the new pads are the solution, they are cheap and easy to replace
''your brakes were squeaky so I oiled them''
If you keep them squeaky, you can attract elephants in a safari
😂
mine are so loud they even attract elephants in downtown! 🙀
I didnt know what to expect when following your steps but it actually helped immensely. Not only is the squeal gone, but the braking force is now 3x compared to what it was before. Great hack. thank you big time mate.
A hack would be like a 3 sec fix, by spraying, or adding something to the breaks, or doing a minor adjustment to remove the squeaky sound. This is just normal maintenance.
Either way, its good instructions for maintenance and its satisfying to watch.
he could've just sent it down a massive hill, and held the front brakes tight until it burnt all the contaminants out. the brakes would be fine after that.
Brakes pads work by transferring part of the friction material onto the rotor. It’s all part of the bedding in process. By sanding the rotor you just reduce the braking efficiency until they bed in again ( and start to resonate once more)
so WD-40 would have the same effect with less hassle then 😬
@@viktorbalogh8467Now THAT is a hack
Actually, the resonating is caused by dust that did not adhere to the disc surface. So clean the dust from the pads and discs with a clean cloth. That's all. No sand paper or blow dryer.
@@viktorbalogh8467You’re joking right?
@@damianchristopher205 I think grease would be more efficient. WD40 just dries too quicky. Who has the time to lube the brake disc and pads once a week?
I just pull the pads out. Wipe the pads and rotor down with break cleaner. Blowtorch the pads for a couple of seconds then put them back. Works every time. If needed to fix them in the field, find a slope, pedal hard down hill while breaking. High heat is the key.
"works every time".. and this is the problem, that it repatadly is coming back :) I dont care about the sound anymore.. too much work for something you get back within a few rides.
Why do you need to heat up the pads?
@@bronsonstephens5799 you can only get the oils in the pads to go away by burning them. you need the pads to get hot enough to ignite the oil that's contaminating them.
@@bronsonstephens5799 it is not to burn up residue, but new pads have to be "burned in" so they wont squeak so soon. This creates something like a "matching pattern" on both the pad and rotor. If sand and contamination ruins this, noise starts. If you do not "ride in" the pads, you will brake hard 1-2 times and your brakes will start squeaking again. Some shops have machine for this to do it in a minute. Good videos on youtube how it is done "manually" on a hill or if you have some legs, on the flat.
@@oranjidoh okay cool. Fascinating. Thanks for the info!
*Insert subway surfers music after that Squeak*
"Here ya go... this will get you to the next shop for some new pads."
legit. did the same thing with my ebike and I was so happy the squeak was gone the first 3 times I tested it but as soon as I rode home and had to brake it was back 😭 I need to buy new pads
I tried it for a while by going down the steepest hills i could find and by repeatedly doing a full on emergency brake while going fast and after like 45 minutes I noticed the squeak was gone, i can brake the bike to a stop without squeaking, but I still need new pads
This actually works well. I had a customer, who pumped his calipers full of grease to make them quieter. I took the challenge, torched the pads and rotor with a torch after degreasing. Bike stopped great after.
@@alexzbarazky3038 I've had mixed luck. I've done alcohol soaks, hit it with some flame, squeal out, sandpaper, brake cleaner, you name it. I've done it for customers and told them I wouldn't charge for the service and if the problem persists to come in for new ones. Some swear it worked and I'll see them on a trail or on the road and some people don't even make it out the door before they started screeching and honking.
@@alexzbarazky3038the rotor is made of an anti-friction alloy and it deteriorates when overheated, so you need to be extremely careful when heating the rotor
They’ll squeak again after 1/2 a ride 😂
LOL i thought at the end of the short they were still going to squeak. I have tried all this stuff and they end up making noise after soon after.... Now I just ride...
I'd try some silglyde for cars and see
@@cataplt I was waiting for it too 😂 missed opportunity
@@cataplt depends on the pads and the level of contamination. My friend's shimano pads cleaned up just fine, my tektro pads didn't get all that much better
@@cataplt Thing is, the pads have to coat there residue over the brake discs to work. There cant be any contamination on the discs of other things. If the brake pads have been coated in...idk mineral oil from the brake system there toast. Other then that follow the steps below.
Go in gear 1
Pedal while braking pretty hard.
You feel the bike isn't really slowing down a lot but it makes a ton of noise.
Keep going.
Let slowly loose of the brake while still in motion every 30 sec or so, for few seconds and break again (to let the disc cool a little).
Go brake on and now you should feel the bike slowing down a little more while still making noise.
Press the break a little less.
Now you should feel it getting stronger and stronger and letting more loose of the brake.
When the noise is pretty much gone. Bike around do this thing above like 3 times between some cycling around and the noise should be gone.
And because here it looks easy and fast and it's usable only in specific cases, it's usually cheaper and way more effective to actually replace both pads, try to clean the rotor and cook out using strong braking force the little rest of debris on the rotor. Changing pads + clean up= 2-3mins, alignment and brake test downhill near the shop = 2 mins. Customer who wants to continue riding is finished in 5-6 mins when everything goes smooth = satisfied customer.
In many, many cases, cleaning the rotor could be done only with specific tools on a angle grinder, everything else is useless. And no, spraying the degreaser is waste. And doing it with sandpaper is only possible in very small scale when you have loads of time and is far less effective because of the principle of brakes itself.
You forgot the part where they don't work at all until you break them in again...
that's easy fixed with some fine clay in water, just coat the rotor in a thin coat & the pads bed in instantly. I prefer the yellow clay that we have in some of the hilly parts of Yorkshire, but any of the finer natural boulder clays should do it.
@@AnthonyIlstonJoneswhat?
You mean "bed" them in, there is no break in for brakes.
@@Trox2018You knew exactly what they meant.
@@Trox2018lmao it's the same thing!
I fixed this yesterday with a can of brake cleaner! No disassembly needed 😌👌
If you get brake cleaner on the calipers or forks it can remove the paint and damage the protective finish. 30 seconds of work to pull the pads out to clean them. Or better yet just replace squeaking pads.
Can't argue with that, cleaning the discs always cured the brake noise on my bike
Shimano Hydraulics are extremely easy to rectify if there’s any brake rub. The tough ones are Magura as the disc is often so thick that the tolerance for smooth running is very small, in fact near impossible when the brake pads and discs are both brand new
depends on the brake. BR-4770 and BR-RX400 have almost no clearance in them, so it's nearly impossible to get them to stop rubbing when new. they do get a bit better after being broken in.
man, that's a lot of work. i'll just ride with the squeak.
Thanks to people like you i have a job, most mechanics likewise
@@radekmaj5875и у врачей
Just wait till you see the work you have to put in to properly bed these brakes
@@mikehuang1369 He didn't hear you. He couldn't stop.
@@JB50713 he hit a tree down the hill
that sounded exactly like my boss's wallet on payday
I had to teach my lady something similar about wiper blades. We were driving in the rain for hours and the wipers started making noise and she thought she had to change them again, only a few weeks in…
I stopped at a filling station (gas station for my US gang) and I cleaned the windshield and the wiper blades and everything was back to normal
What did you use?
A cutter that slices a tiny slice off the edge probably @@aresorum
Or cleaned it
I clean my wipers all the time(I live in the NW) and it helps so much especially with the water on the roads splashing up that has dirt/oil in it which really gets them dirty
So the hack is to clean your brakes... groundbreaking stuff here
Guy also resurfaced the pads and cross-hatched the rotor. It’s a good tip. Takes the glazing off the pads and rotor which is what causes the squeak. I’ve done it on a wet clutch on my race bike when I was having issues with slipping and it cleared that issue right up. Grabs like nobodies business
Didn't you mean... Groundbraking? Yeah my jokes suck
Won't the discs rust now he's scratched them? I get 'tea staining' on smooth metal
braking news
Squeaky brakes literally saved me from colliding with an NPC in a European town..
NPC?😂
#MateuszMyla
😂
It’s so adorable seeing little brake pads.
Someone who thinks like I do 🤗
Enough to get thrown over the handle bar when engaged abruptly.
That will work great as long as you do it after every ride.
after every braking
If you get bearing grease and put a good solid layer on the rotor and pads it really helps with the noise. Loosening the brake cable works as well.
Just a FYI you should always sand against the pad path. Going with will create grooves that could and will groove your pads. Going against will aid in grip and also allow the pad to knock down the high spots over time.
This is a good point! I like to spin the wheel and move the sand paper in and out across the braking surface while it spins, it creates a criss-crossing wave type pattern. This is what we do with vehicle rotors when they've just been cut on a lathe.
Little side-note: don't push the pistons back with al wrench, prefer something softer, like a plastic tirespoon. Shimano uses in some of the calipers ceramic cups! Ceramic cups wil break and will leak.
Just use old breakpads and then a screwdriver or something like that
I love scaring grandpas with squeaky brakes when they block the road
The handful of times I've had to resurface my pads, I used a sanding screen so the material could fall away from the pad surface and not be ground back into it.
Doing that eliminated the need to clean and heat the pads in every case.
I find most of my brake noise goes away just by wiping down the rotor with some alcohol. I would consider this a level 2 procedure. If you resurface the pads/rotor, you'll also want to make sure the pads are bedded in properly too.
Bro I told my siblings to do some oiling on the chains and he put the oil in the calipers what should I do? Should I change the whole set?
@@IRIS.3111 The rotor can be cleaned off with solvent. For the brake pads, you'll need to remove them from the calipers, then using some pliers to hold them, cook off the contaminants with a propane torch.
@@lihtan thanks bro I will try it
After it loops back to the start and you hear the loud squeak I can't help but laugh
Use copper grease on the back of the pad, ie where the pad contacts the cylinder. Obviously this needs to be done very carefully. I haven’t had any squeak since I started doing this.
i agree. copperpaste is the best.
This is done on motorcycles as well. This is the proper way to remove squeaking. Squeak is just a vibration. The grease helps the pad moving freely against the cylinder and the vibration is not generated. The copper grease just lasts longer on the pad. Can't believe this is so low in the comments
Dont use copperpaste it reacts with other Marerials Like Aluminium use Keramik Paste there is no Reaktion
@@radelpaul11 I don't think there is aluminum on any part of the calipers, nor on the pads, nor on the pistons, if on the caliper itself . Maybe some brakes have them but I've never seen one
That almost never works! Most squeaking comes from the disk and pads, NOT the disk to cylinder contact face.
Source: 30 years of trying different things on various machines
El problema de ruido se soluciona limpiando pero también es porque las pastillas están rozando el disco de forma dispareja y se debe centrar correctamente la mordaza.
a faster way to break the glaze is to ride downhill, then grab the single brake hard, then release quickly so you either don't flip or lock up the wheel. Do it several times if needed.
I one-hundred % agree with this procedure. The only thing I will be very careful with is using a plastic lever to push the pads apart. I recommend you put the pads back in and use a plastic tire lever to push the pistons back into the caliper. Other than that, this is excellent video advice. And I’m a professional bicycle mechanic for over 40 years.
Yes, it will work good while it is in your service, but when your client will warm up pads while riding , pads will release grease that is hidden inside and noise and weakness will be back. Best way to solve this problem - buy new pads and clean rotor, if you can't do it try to put your old pads in a boiling water for a while.
A goose has entered the bike chat
Honk like goose boy! 🤣
Thank you now my brake works great
Через пол часа максимум скрип вернётся. Тут только замена колодок и тщательная очистка диска щеткой со стиральным порошком (в том числе в отверстиях диска), до состояния чистой воды и щетки. Иначе вся грязь из отверстий будет на ваших новых колодках.
Ничего подобного. Второй сезон катаю, все ок.
Exactly 🙄
и это не спасёт, скрип идёт от тормозной жидкости, надо перебирать колипер.
@@chopskates5980 причём тут жидкость в трубке к ротеру и колодкам? 🤦🤷
Господа, вы же в курсе, чем по сути является скрип колодок при контакте с тормозным диском? Причина появления этого звука одинакова как в автомобильных колодках, так и в велосипедных.
Наберитесь терпения, сейчас будет очень нудное повествование...
Контактные поверхности пары колодка-поршень это металл, причем на колодке этот металл имеет эмалевое покрытие, предотвращающее контакт с металлом поршня. При торможении колодка ложится на диск/ротор и при не плотном прилегании к нему начинает вибрировать, что в совокупности с износом(отсутствием) эмали на обратной стороне колодки приводит к микротрению в паре поршень-колодка. Слышимый скрип это результат трения металла о металл и лечится восстановлением термостойкой и износостойкой эмали либо нанесением термостйкой, консистентной смазки на обраную сторону колодки.
Прокаливание и зачистка рабочей повехности колодок, как отчищение диска/ротора, делается для удаления загрязнений, что в свою очередь уменьшает дополнительный износ пары колодка-диск/ротор, что в свою очередь позволяет избежать износа диска/ротора, что позволяет сохранить пятно контакта колодки большим и стабильным, что позволяет избежать появление шумов при торможении.
Всё😊
Tbh at that point I’m buying new brakes💀
Waste of money but ok
Even new brakes can squeak. It’s good practice to clean rotors and degrease pads before installation, and that’s half of what was done in this video. Doesn’t hurt to surface polish/sand the rotors and pads to remove any rough spots from handling, shipping, manufacture imperfections/poor tolerances.
You should be doing this even with new brakes. It's called maintaince. Nothing is immortal.
In the 70s, my disc brake pads were sprayed with a substance that eliminated brake pad squeaking, and also removed the small metal pieces that squeak when the pad gets worn down. He knew I checked the brake pads.
A hack i learned at my bike shop- do the same steps but instead of heat gun you spray blake cleaner and carefully light it up so the pad burn nicely.
@David to get all of the cleaner off.
I pass a torch across the pads. Takes 5 seconds. No cleaning solution. No sanding. No fuss. Easy peasy.
blake cleaner
NEVER USE TOOLS WITH OUT THE PADS IN ON CERAMIC PISTONS! If you don't have the pads in you will Crack your pistons. Trust me, I cracked 2 of mine that way.
if you can afford calipers with ceramic pistons then you aren't the type of person who is watching a bike hack video lol, just saying.
@@NonLegitNation2 yes lol, those 4 pod xts are a nightmare to work on, as those pistons just break when you look at them... I think even the deores have ceramic if I'm not completely blind... I thought the 4 pod 6120 I have lying around have ceramic, but I'm not completely sure... And those are not really pricey.
And those shitty ceramic pistons even crack with the right tools, even with pads in, without pads and with plastic lever, they always crack... Doesn't matter what you do, you have to press them back in straight, if they go in just a little bit crooked, they are gonna break. Really annoying to get the shards out again, right mate? 😂
@@ironeinar Yeah, really annoying. in my case, I got a set of 8120s for free, so I didn't mind as much, but the shards were everywhere! the hardest part was getting the ceramic dust out of the fluid ports where the mineral oil would normally flow, a good bleed kit and an air compressor got the job done!
@@owenadair8893 yeah thats so annoying, im happy that I dont have to encounter this problem on my personal brakes, because I run Shigura, but my boss in the shop, who serviced hundrets of ceramic pistons still has problems not breaking the pistons while pushing them back in xD
There is nothing better then extremely squeaky brakes
En España 5 minutos con la pistola de calor son una fortuna... vale menos un juego de pastillas nuevas.
Es claro que sí
Why is it expensive to use a heat gun?
@@mydearriley Expensive electricity, probably. ?
Acá en Argentina las pastillas de frenos de bicicleta son más caras que las de auto
Брат, приезжай к нам в Россию🙂
I didn’t know how to change the brake pads on my bike so thank you for this video
Sometimes the squeak comes from loose bolts.👍
or mis-alignment...
Or, keep them squeeky, so the rider in front knows they're slowing you up and should let you by before there's a crash!
Valid point. Works for informing the rider behind as well.
Damn, those squeaky sounding brakes are used by me to get rid of pedestrians from my lane, now it's an issue for people?
I quite like my squeaky brakes now.
Никаких натираний наждачкой диска! Просто протираем бензином/растворителем.
А вот колодки лишь слегка чистим и прокаливаем (пока дымить будут). Ничего не разрушается. Три года назад делал так себе. И год назад доче. Совет мне этот дал один хороший товарищ.
Не чешьто бензином нельзя , поевляеться пленка жирная не
Спасибо. Долго страдал от этого звука. Почистил всё, но наждачкой не тёр.
@@ДмитрийКрылов-б8р чушь несусветная. Бензином (я беру "галошу") вообще-то ОБЕЗЖИРИВАЮТ поверхности. Какая, к чёрту, жирная плёнка.
@@ДмитрийКрылов-б8р так прожигать же потом..
Thank you. Good, simple and without talking!!
Like the perfect woman.
The idea of having a cotter pin for the pads instead of a screw is... madness.
A car's wheel bearings and brake pads are held in with a 'split pins' with no problems 😊
Yeah. Sure. A company that has been making brakes and most other bike components for decades with thousands of engineers - should learn from a guy on the internet. Actually the pin works fine. It's not doing much - it's not actually holding the pads against the braking force (as you'll notice, none of car brake pads have a hole for either a pin or a screw). The holding is done by caliper body. Some of earlier brakes - for instance, the well-famous Avid Juicy series (3, 5, 7, Carbon) - didn't have a pin or screw at all - relied solely on placement of the pad in the caliper body and the metal spring. One of my bikes has these since 2005 - still work like a treat, even with abusive lack of maintenance.
@@JurisKankalis Cotter pins are a consumable item, they don't last forever. A good screw will last for as long as you take care of it. My bike has pads that are held in with a screw and it works like a charm.
@@lorraineschofield123 what is a castle nut and what is the cotter pin for?
lol the cotterpin is to keep the nut from fully backing off.
it does nothing to hold hubs or bearings.
Rather have a pin than the Shimano flat head screw.
Organic or metallic pads contaminated with grease are rarely able to be fixed. Even with acetone and sanding, the contaminant has likely soaked throughout the whole thing and the problem will reoccur after some more wear. Don’t expect this to work all the time. If you attempt, use tons of acetone and let them soak for a long time, multiple times.
Agree. They might stop squealing for maybe 10 minutes of the next bike ride.
Anyone else notice that the caliper he is working on is the Shimano m355 which is one of the most common caliper for failing and leaking this method is a short term fix as soon as you hear the pads up the oil will draw out of the pad material and the rotor is discolored by the oil it has absorbed and the same thing will happen as the pads they will become contaminated on the surface
Instructions unclear now my disc is glowing red and my brakes are on fire
The solution for me was one I wasn't expecting at all. I performed a brake bleed and the squeal from my front rotor disappeared. I'd tried all the typical solutions before and had given up on the issue. However I performed the brake bleed and the noise went away.
My theory is that air in the line was preventing my brake pads from making contact as hard as they should which is now no longer the case.
Perhaps the air allowed the pad and fluid to oscillate.. just spitballing
@dielaughing73 yes. Considering you can't compress water
Well it doesn't squeeze much. It can apply lots of force without changing volume
protip: put oil on the brake pads and disk, it will help you brake and remove all sounds
Squeaky brakes brake harder change my mind
Wow! No stupid music. No long-takes, showing how to remove bolts. Nice clean cuts without (dum) fancy animations. Nice job! 👏
Finally somebody who shows that heating the break pads is the way to.
Проще сразу новые колодки поставить, желательно Шимано, они не шумят
если ты едешь по земле скрипеть они будут в любом случае, ибо пыль в зазоре неизбежна.
"replace the break pads " 😂
Aint lying. Shimano pads are crap. You need another brand and the squeek will go away. Shimanos have a poor compound that sucks up moisture
Amassou mt nessa 😮💨🤌
Nah I just like to put WD-40 on mine
Does it works?
@@loviecirilobalo4517 no!!! Wd-40 Is oil🤦🏼♂️
@@zvebiNmob1zer666_ nope that not oil
@@zvebiNmob1zer666_ that water displacement
@@zvebiNmob1zer666_ clean using rotor cleaner
They sure won't squeak any more after you crack your ceramic pistons with that wrench.
If they crack that easily, this stuff is garbage.
@@ThisTimeTheWorld That's the nature of ceramic pistons. Has nothing to do with quality.
@@michaelmichaelagnew8503 weak stuff
@@ThisTimeTheWorldspot isn't meant to be shoved on
Poke a hole in a radiator and see how weak something can be
Sand twoard the edge of the disc instead of sideways, it should work similar to slotted rotors and help gasses escape more efficiently.
I just use marine grease on my rotors, it even works on my truck!
Just grind the edges from the pads and you are good to go. And never do something like that to the disks
You don't need brake cleaner, rub the pads together with washing up liquid under warm water, then rinse with boiling water, leave to dry. Only sand if they have bad grooves. Isopropyl alcohol for the discs.
wear respirator. brake pads still often contain asbestos in different regions
all Shimano brake pads are Japan and EU legal, so probably asbestos free.
@@AlexandarHullRichter truth
I find olive oil really helps to stop squeaks. Brakes don't work so good, but hey.... 😂
😊 Justamente necesitaba este video... Gracias 👍🏼
А теперь выбрось их на помойку и купи новые.
А мне нравится , скрипят только когда пережимаешь. Я их использую как клаксон😄
Me, a mechanic: "AWW LOOK AT THE TINY BRAKE PADS. SO CUTE 🥹"
Стоп, ты же забыл помазать колодки графитовой смазкой😊
Wait, you forgot to coat the pads with graphite lubricant😊
This is good craftmanship and the short is nicely detailed. Well done my friend.
What is the beatgun for tho ? I guess it's for more than evaporate the brake cleaner ?
This isn't a hack.
It's basic maintenance.
This doesn’t work unless the squeak is caused by a slight contamination. Usually the brakes squeak when the pads have not been bedded in properly. The only solution is new pads and bed them in properly. If that’s the case
Use a steel sanding block tome sure that the pads contact surface is level. Also, use automotive brake clean, it evaporates quickly and won't leave behind any residue. For the rotors, don't sand them, you can put a directional pattern into the rotor and then you'll get chatter from the pads and prematurely wear them out. Brake clean and a 3m scrub pad (or a brown cookie in a drill) will be better.
Yea. Mine only squeaked when wet (rain) but when dry they didnt
В реальном мире никто так заморачиваться не будет😅 работают тормоза и слава богу
You can burn the pads with a torch, it will burn all the oil away and leave them like new without losing pad material. Dont forget the deep clean the rotor too.
this mostly happened for rear ones. you can clean them, go hill down on full break (rear) and noise will come back anyway - must be contamination within.
Thanks, I really need this one now!
Usefull 👍🏻
Olive oil takes care of the sqeak in a few seconds.
best bike asmr i ever seen
I needed this really bad for my cycle
in the automotive world ... we used to call that a "clean and adjust". You would normally see this after a good rain
I like my maguras that have the pads accessible from the top. Saves a little time. You'll still probably have to align your caliper. I use the alignment tool that slides between the pads and rotor. 👍
My mother used 3 in 1 (lubricant) for the squeaky brakes of my bike…
They never worked again
Now everytime he stops, people won't think there is an injured goose nearby,