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Brake vibration

Posted: Tue May 14, 2019 6:22 pm
by timthetooth
Hi chaps.

I had my front discs (from Audi) replaced about a 1000 miles ago, and Ferodo DS2500 pads. I could not really bed them in as described on here at the time as it was slippery on the roads, and to much traffic. I then developed a vibration through the steering wheel while braking, worse at about 45mph, nothing below 35mph. I then tried to bed them in by braking several times from about 80mph down to 30, but this has not got rid of the problem. I have put an old pair of discs back on, but the problem remains.
My question is, can I re-bed these pads in, and if so how? If not, how do people get these Ferodo pads to bed in from new without being arrested!
Looking forward to hearing your views as this vibration is spoiling my enjoyment of the car.

Tim

Re: Brake vibration

Posted: Tue May 14, 2019 6:33 pm
by c3nturi0n
Rarely (but it happens) is that the part/s could be faulty.

Best way to check is to take it back to the garage (assuming someone did this work for you) to check them out or if it was diy'd then you may want to get in touch with supplier.

Re: Brake vibration

Posted: Tue May 14, 2019 6:36 pm
by Jim Haseltine
If you've put old discs back on and you've still got vibration I'd suggest you take a look at suspension bushes and ball joints, especially as you say there's no vibration at lower speeds.

Re: Brake vibration

Posted: Wed May 15, 2019 7:24 am
by timthetooth
All joints have been checked and some replaced about a year ago Jim. Pads may have been from a bad batch, difficult to prove though.
I took the car out last night and did lots of 60mph to 20 brakes. The only effect was the pedal eventually became a little soft , vibration actually seemed to get worse :-(

Re: Brake vibration

Posted: Wed May 15, 2019 8:01 am
by welwynnick
Most likely explanation for brake vibration when the discs have been replaced is dirt and corrosion between the hub and the disc. The mating surfaces have to be spotless.

Nick

Re: Brake vibration

Posted: Wed May 15, 2019 10:23 am
by Toady1
IF you've swapped the discs and its still doing it then it doesn't point towards warped discs. Pads will not cause this effect as they're the static part. The only thing I can assume is as said above, the hub and disc isn't flat perfectly, making the disc position in the caliper move as it rotates, causing the warping effect and judder. I'd take it all apart, clean mating surfaces thoroughly with brake cleaner and a rag, and reassemble.

You can lightly rough up the pad surface again with some sandpaper to start the bedding in process again. But I think its a fitment issue you have.