I did not understood the question. I have bought NAPA Autoparts front disc bake pads, EBC yellow rear and Alibaba Chinesium discs imported from China. Years later, so far so good. Maserati OEM discs are outrageously high priced, I think the discs are outsourced.
Hey man, I need help. I have experience on working in my cars. I successfully replaced the rotors and brake pads in the front. Very easy. The problem is the rear, I cannot get the 2 bolts off to remove the rotor. Can you please help by showing me how to remove it
I would not use grease on the back of the pads due to the fact that friction causes heat and grease is flammable. Must realize that the brake shoes do not actually move very much, they always hoover-ride the disc when no brake pedal is pressed. I have never seen a need to apply any grease, a tiny bit of anti-seize yes. I avoid using grease. Thanks for the suggestion. After inquiring why to apply some grease to the back of the brake pads I discovered the following; "The bare dry back of the pad plate vibrates against the metal of the caliper. Keeping some brake grease or "anti-squeal" on the back of the pad metal keeps the metal to metal vibrations to a minimum."
My friend , i would like to ask you
Do you no ather disk break for gran turismo s 2014 with same performance and Cheaper price ?
I did not understood the question. I have bought NAPA Autoparts front disc bake pads, EBC yellow rear and Alibaba Chinesium discs imported from China. Years later, so far so good. Maserati OEM discs are outrageously high priced, I think the discs are outsourced.
Hey man, I need help. I have experience on working in my cars. I successfully replaced the rotors and brake pads in the front. Very easy. The problem is the rear, I cannot get the 2 bolts off to remove the rotor. Can you please help by showing me how to remove it
Sorry for the late reply to your request, I have never removed the rear brake calipers. When I do, then I shall post a video on it.
If you going to do a how to video start from beginning.....
Grease the back of those pads.
I would not use grease on the back of the pads due to the fact that friction causes heat and grease is flammable. Must realize that the brake shoes do not actually move very much, they always hoover-ride the disc when no brake pedal is pressed. I have never seen a need to apply any grease, a tiny bit of anti-seize yes. I avoid using grease. Thanks for the suggestion. After inquiring why to apply some grease to the back of the brake pads I discovered the following; "The bare dry back of the pad plate vibrates against the metal of the caliper. Keeping some brake grease or "anti-squeal" on the back of the pad metal keeps the metal to metal vibrations to a minimum."