Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

2000 R34gtt

i changed my brake pads, front and rear, and as i was changing the front i noticed that the pads that were on teh car had 2 metal peices on the back of the pad, 1 peice is the size of the comeplet pad and the other half the size of the pad...

now i put these peices onto the new pad, but i didnt on the rear as i didnt notice it until after the fronts...now should i remove this peice as i am thinking it may have been specificly for the type of pad that was previously on the car?

changed to bendix CT standard pads

ive noticed a metal noise when i drive past fences i thought it could be that moving around

thanks

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/288629-r34-brake-pad-change-help/
Share on other sites

The 2 metal pieces are the brake shims (they are factory items and are meant to be taken off the old pads and put on the replacements pads), they're there to prevent audible vibration under braking (and are supposed to be greased as well). If the noise is bothering you, just put the shims back on and make sure to grease them with copper grease.

just another word of advice

if the brake pads came with shims, use them

i change to green stuff which came with there own shims. I used the factory ones first, and they were quite noisey

so i change to the ones that they gave me, and they have made no noise since =)

Edited by br3ndan

ok awsome, thanks for that, i will try greesing them up, do i put the greese only between the pad n metal or all over both sides?

the noise is an annoying metaly cling scrapey type noise, not too loud tho, and thats wiht the metal shims (not greesed tho)

the replacement pads didnt come with any tho

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Meanwhile, 20+ years ago, I pulled out the 105mm hole saw and went straight down through the inner guard in front of the airbox to get my stormwater pipe cold air intake in. Right behind the two stock holes for the intercooler pipes. Those have no reinforcement (apart from a couple of robust pieces of steel pipe through them!). I feel that the Australian vehicle standards crews put way too much emphasis on "maintaining the crash performance" of cars and not enough consideration of "any crash is a new and wonderful experiment with a random selection of parameters and you will never be able to tell if an extra 80mm hole through some sheet metal caused a significant difference...but if you close your eyes and squint at the whole structure, engage your engineering brain and have a good think about it, you'd have to expect that it would do jack all."
    • You guys are focussing on the wrong part of this post and have headed off on an irrelevant tangent!  Clearly I'm not going to put my most prized physical possession (well it will be once I'm finished it...) on a piece of shit contraption that might fail and crush me or my car!  At no point was that even implied I was trying to buy a butchered P.O.S that some shonky clown had thrown together with a gasless MIG....  Either way I would love to see the build quality of a rotisserie that has failed.  Actually I'd love to see a photo of one that has failed full stop.  Google fails to deliver.  Never happened?? I'll either make one that won't fail or will buy one that wouldn't fail! End Post.....
    • Yeah, if you can't breathe for more than about 2 minutes, you're cooked.
    • Well, all the power should be getting dissipated across the starter motor. Therefore, ideally, the voltage drop across the earth lead should be convincingly close to zero. Certainly you'd want it to be only a volt or so at max, because otherwise that volt doesn't turn up at the starter to do what is required. A car can probably survive a bad enough earth to crank and start with only 9V or so at the starter motor, maybe even a bit less. But you're seeing only 8V at the battery terminals when cranking, so there can't even be that much available over at the starter, which simply won't do. I would have thought that you couldn't pull enough current (with a healthy starter) to make the battery drop to 8V locally. But I was ignoring the possibility that the starter is in fact crook. If it has shorted windings (or maybe the solenoid is borked and shorting to earth) then I guess it could pull a stack of current and not even look like wanting to turn over. So follow the other boys' reccos too. Because they are just as likely at this point.  
    • Depending where the whole gets drilled, and what country/state you're talking about, quite likely not.   Under ole vehicle mod rules in NSW, VSI06 allowed for drilling of holes in "non structural" areas. So you could drill a hole through the inner guard, and not need engineering. You couldn't drill over seams, and it was advised to add extra reinforcing around the hole, as well as something to protect from sharp edges.   Again, it's all about finding the documentation for where the mod is to be done, AND then being able to explain the situation, with the documentation as to why you don't need engineering, with a positive attitude, to any one of the likes eg, police, vehicle inspector, etc.
×
×
  • Create New...