Front Brake Pad Upgrade Part 1 of 2: Carbotech Brake PadsSo, after much deliberation I have decided to try out the
Carbotech Pads from the US. I picked them up from
949 Racing and ended up going with the entry level AX6 model. I settled on the Carbotechs for a few reasons:
- quite a few Hawk pad users in the States (Hawks seem quite popular amongst MX5 drivers) had switched to these and had glowing reports (no pun intended)
- Carbotech pads use a Ceramic-Kevlar compound which reportedly gives excellent "modulation and release" characteristics
- the ceramics also help reduce rotor wear over traditional pads
- braking torque is consistent over a wide temperature range (65°C - 650°C for the AX6 pads)
- price: the performance numbers seemed comparable to Japanese pads (Endless, Autoexe, Dixcel) that I was looking at which were a good 15-25% dearer and by most accounts would not last as long.
So, the sales bumf certainly worked
Mainly though, i was wanting to try out a near stock pad with good cold braking that could withstand the odd trackday.
The transaction with Emilio at 949 Racing was very smooth, and the pads arrived after about a fortnight.
I also took the liberty of ordering some of 949 Racing's braided lines for the NC. But those were not to be installed initially - I wanted to bed the pads in on their own first, and feel the difference from stock without any other changes.
So, new OEM front rotors were installed with the pads.
The bedding procedure for the Carbotech pads is very specific. The idea is to get the transfer layer down onto your new discs. Once this is done you get a better contact between pad and disc, and apparently this process is required to gain the full benefits that the Carbotech compound gives you. After a few decellerations from speed (100km/h - 40km/h) you can see the disc starts to take on a bluey-grey hue. TBH I didn't follow the brake in procedure to the letter, however I
did take care to follow Indy's strict instructions which he recommends for ANY new pads, which is no hard braking for the first 300km. Indy's wisdom stipulates that you don't want to generate significant heat between a new pad and a new disc. This process worked wonders for the aftermarket pads I wore on the Lexus, so I'm continuing with this thought process here.
I'm very interested to see how the lifespan of these new pads (and the new stock discs) pans out as it should reveal just how good these pads are, and wether or not my bed in procedure was satisfactory!