W
WilliamGLX81
Guest
Hey all. I just put new semi-sintered (because I can't stand organics) pads on my 81 gs650gl. I also flushed the fluid and replaced the brake line (mmm stainless). (The pads are EBC FA-65v pads if anyone wants to get some.)
I was going to go out and bed them in this afternoon, but after a bit of reading, I'm seeing two different ideas.
What I'm used to is: go for a drive on a country road and brake from 45 to 15 5 times, then brake from 60 to 20 5-8 times, then let the brakes cool off and avoid coming to a complete stop.
What the pads packaging says is:
"Ride carefully in town for 250 miles and your pads will be bed-in correctly" .... That contradicts everything I know about braking. But everything I know about braking is based on cast-iron rotors on cars with power brakes, so... Yeah.
What gives? Has anybody tried both ways?
As I understand it, the purpose of the bed-in procedure is the following things:
Establish an even layer of friction material on the rotor.
Cook out any remaining semi-volatile chemicals to fully dry the pad.
Mate the two surfaces together.
Is this difference because our bikes don't (do they?) have cast rotors and the rotors are much softer? That's the only thing I can think of.
Cheers
I was going to go out and bed them in this afternoon, but after a bit of reading, I'm seeing two different ideas.
What I'm used to is: go for a drive on a country road and brake from 45 to 15 5 times, then brake from 60 to 20 5-8 times, then let the brakes cool off and avoid coming to a complete stop.
What the pads packaging says is:
"Ride carefully in town for 250 miles and your pads will be bed-in correctly" .... That contradicts everything I know about braking. But everything I know about braking is based on cast-iron rotors on cars with power brakes, so... Yeah.
What gives? Has anybody tried both ways?
As I understand it, the purpose of the bed-in procedure is the following things:
Establish an even layer of friction material on the rotor.
Cook out any remaining semi-volatile chemicals to fully dry the pad.
Mate the two surfaces together.
Is this difference because our bikes don't (do they?) have cast rotors and the rotors are much softer? That's the only thing I can think of.
Cheers