Brake pad change on the day

Brake pad change on the day

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Discussion

Oldybaldy17

Original Poster:

35 posts

24 months

Wednesday 6th March
quotequote all
I have a potential trackday coming up(Bedford autodrome)and on inspection of the front pads they just under half worn. They are hawk pads, so track suitable.
My question is do people change pads at the trackday? It's a straight forward job and I have the tools, so thinking do the morning session then swap to new pads at lunch. Or do I swap before leaving?
What do others do or have done?

illmonkey

18,213 posts

199 months

Wednesday 6th March
quotequote all
I've had to go to ECP and get pads on the lunch break, then fit upon my return.

It's fine to work on the car, if that is your question. If you have the time, maybe it's worth swapping them before and then bedding them in, so you might get away without swapping them on the day.

simon_harris

1,312 posts

35 months

Wednesday 6th March
quotequote all
I've changed pads on the day before, like you I knew I was going to be on the limit so the weekend before going I stripped the brakes down and greased everything that needed to be greased, made sure I had all the right tools I was going to need etc.

made sure then that on the day the job went quickly and smoothly

E-bmw

9,240 posts

153 months

Wednesday 6th March
quotequote all
As above, I always used to carry a spare set and a bedded in set just to be on the safe side, just check them regularly in case they wear quicker than you think.

Wh00sher

1,590 posts

219 months

Wednesday 6th March
quotequote all
I've changed them on a day before. Just make sure you have all the tools and the spare pads.

Only downside is bedding in may not be ideal. If possible, fit before lunch, bed in for a couple of laps then let them cool whilst you eat. But that's not always possible.

mmm-five

11,249 posts

285 months

Wednesday 6th March
quotequote all
Wh00sher said:
I've changed them on a day before. Just make sure you have all the tools and the spare pads.

Only downside is bedding in may not be ideal. If possible, fit before lunch, bed in for a couple of laps then let them cool whilst you eat. But that's not always possible.
You've probably changed gearboxes & clutches on a track day as well - so brake pads should be doable with your eyes closed and both hands behind your back wink

E-bmw

9,240 posts

153 months

Wednesday 6th March
quotequote all
mmm-five said:
Wh00sher said:
I've changed them on a day before. Just make sure you have all the tools and the spare pads.

Only downside is bedding in may not be ideal. If possible, fit before lunch, bed in for a couple of laps then let them cool whilst you eat. But that's not always possible.
You've probably changed gearboxes & clutches on a track day as well - so brake pads should be doable with your eyes closed and both hands behind your back wink
The man raises a good point. wink

IanH755

1,862 posts

121 months

Wednesday 6th March
quotequote all
It's not 100% clear from the OP but, despite seeming easy and you having the tools for it - have you actually changed pads on this car before, just to make sure you don't potentially waste a track day attempting an "easy job" which turns into a nightmare of seized pins, leaking pistons, rounded wheel bolts/nuts etc or you find you don't have something specific you need.

brillomaster

1,261 posts

171 months

Wednesday 6th March
quotequote all
if you've got the pads and the tools, you can change pads on the day, no problem. done it a few times myself.

personally, if the ones that are in there are only half worn, i'd leave them in. decent pads should be able to do more than 2 trackdays. but take the replacement pads with you - and if you start getting really low, swap them in over lunch.


Oldybaldy17

Original Poster:

35 posts

24 months

Wednesday 6th March
quotequote all
IanH755 said:
It's not 100% clear from the OP but, despite seeming easy and you having the tools for it - have you actually changed pads on this car before, just to make sure you don't potentially waste a track day attempting an "easy job" which turns into a nightmare of seized pins, leaking pistons, rounded wheel bolts/nuts etc or you find you don't have something specific you need.
Yes I had the calipers offs to inspect the wear level of the pads properly and a look over the calipers. I wouldn't attempt a job like that at a trackday having never done it before, that would be risky. Have done lots of pads on motorbikes so know my way around brakes, cars are just bigger but basic for most(only 1 or 2 pistons to push back).
It was more a question about would and do people swaps on a trackday. It seems such a waste of pads if you're not quite halfway through their life. Also not having done many trackdays in the car I'm conscious that some tracks are heavier on brakes than others.
Thanks for the replies.

Cambs_Stuart

2,880 posts

85 months

Thursday 7th March
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Just to repeat what others have said, I've swapped pads at a track with no issues, but I've also had to help out a friend with seized calliper bolts who was trying to replace a warped disc, which wasn't fun. So make sure all the bolts, bleed nipples etc can be moved before you get there. And that you've got all the tools you may need.
But assuming the hawk pads are vaguely track appropriate I'd be surprised if you used 50% in a day.
At cadwell park a couple of years ago there were two chaps from the 2CV championship who changed an engine their lunchbreak, which i thought was impressive.

Shaoxter

4,083 posts

125 months

Thursday 7th March
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Are you really going to go through half a set of pads before lunch? i.e. one set per trackday?
If so, the car probably isn't fit for purpose for a trackday anyway...

mmm-five

11,249 posts

285 months

Thursday 7th March
quotequote all
Shaoxter said:
Are you really going to go through half a set of pads before lunch? i.e. one set per trackday?
If so, the car probably isn't fit for purpose for a trackday anyway...
F1 cars can go through a set of brakes in 2 hours - they're also useless for track too!

Anyway, if you run with half-worn pads then you reduce weight biggrin

Bright Halo

2,975 posts

236 months

Thursday 7th March
quotequote all
I always take a spare set of pads and the tools to change them. I never have though and don’t fancy doing it during a track day.
I will always change them prior to going if less than about 30% left.

Wh00sher

1,590 posts

219 months

Thursday 7th March
quotequote all
mmm-five said:
You've probably changed gearboxes & clutches on a track day as well - so brake pads should be doable with your eyes closed and both hands behind your back wink
biggrin

Shaoxter said:
Are you really going to go through half a set of pads before lunch? i.e. one set per trackday?
If so, the car probably isn't fit for purpose for a trackday anyway...
I've gone through a set of pads in a day at Bedford when I was limited to disc size to to wheel clearance limitations.

I've done the same, arrived on the day with a set of pads that won't last the day, but are too good to simply throw away. They aren't cheap and we want to get the full use out of them.

Done the same with tyres, had a set fitted that if I removed I'd never pay to get re mounted, but lasted several sessions before I needed to remove them and fit a replacement set.


We aren't racing so why not get the most out of consumables.

CedricN

820 posts

146 months

Thursday 7th March
quotequote all
Shaoxter said:
Are you really going to go through half a set of pads before lunch? i.e. one set per trackday?
If so, the car probably isn't fit for purpose for a trackday anyway...
I went through a set of pads in 45minutes, in the same type of car I could also do multiple seasons of track days on one set. Its all about the pads, it can really make a dramatic difference.

Turn7

23,630 posts

222 months

Thursday 7th March
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OP, check if your caliper requires a wind back tool if you’ve not done them before….

Chuck328

1,581 posts

168 months

Thursday 7th March
quotequote all
Wh00sher said:
I've gone through a set of pads in a day at Bedford when I was limited to disc size to to wheel clearance limitations.
What pad were you using to go in a day ?

Wh00sher

1,590 posts

219 months

Thursday 7th March
quotequote all
Carbon Lorraine RC6.

Awesome pads, but on 280mm discs they ended up getting far too hot. Never faded though!

Now I'm on 364mm discs I don't have that issue wink

Edited by Wh00sher on Friday 8th March 09:31

Chuck328

1,581 posts

168 months

Friday 8th March
quotequote all
Until your edit, I was going to reply "ugghh I'll stick with ferrodo " laugh but thats fair enough!