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Home > Maintenance & Modifications > Copper slip on brake rotors - long term affect on discs? |
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Delboy Member Since: 31 Aug 2017 Location: Norwich Posts: 108 |
My 2p worth, if there’s even the slightest chance you’ve contaminated the brake components you need to change them.
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28th Apr 2020 8:33 pm |
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dunkley201 Member Since: 09 Jul 2011 Location: Lincolnshire Posts: 2739 |
Brake cleaner, IPA or Trichlorethylene (if you can still get it). TFR not a proper degreaser. Change them!
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29th Apr 2020 1:29 pm |
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AndyPP Member Since: 20 Jun 2017 Location: South Yorkshire Posts: 99 |
cheers. I've got some new yellow stuff pads to go on, to hopefully manage heat a bit better. May be a good time to do a big disc upgrade with the v6 or xc70 discs. Plenty of time to do it 🤣 |
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29th Apr 2020 5:26 pm |
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jules Member Since: 13 Dec 2007 Location: The Wilds of Warwickshire Posts: 5061 |
Brake grease seems to be a mine field of opinions and its not easy to find independent reviews.
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30th Apr 2020 7:20 am |
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jules Member Since: 13 Dec 2007 Location: The Wilds of Warwickshire Posts: 5061 |
Ive not found the FL2 OEM pads insufficient in any way. However, in the past, I upgraded my BMW brakes with Tarox pads -excellent and reasonable priced. Might be useful in the future if you go big brakes. Do you use a brake pad bedding in procedure? https://brakeperformance.com/bedding-in-rotors.php Jules |
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30th Apr 2020 7:29 am |
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dorsetfreelander Member Since: 20 Jul 2013 Location: Dorset Posts: 4354 |
I have always used copper grease very sparingly on wheel nuts, any sliding bits of the brake system, the rear side of pads and where alloy wheels contact the hub. You don't need much, my tin of grease is about 40 years old and at current rate of use will see me though. The lady next door had a puncture on her drive a few months ago and the alloys were seized on so badly that it took a piece of wood and lump hammer to get the wheel off and this on a 15 reg car. 3 x FL1 2 manual + 1 auto
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30th Apr 2020 9:06 am |
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jules Member Since: 13 Dec 2007 Location: The Wilds of Warwickshire Posts: 5061 |
Dorsetfreelander: I use Copperslip for the wheels/nuts too. Just use Ceratec for the brakes as those parts need to move.
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30th Apr 2020 9:13 am |
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Boxbrownie Member Since: 17 Mar 2019 Location: Looe Posts: 2053 |
Also Copaslip should not ooze grease when hot it has a upper range of over 1000 deg C.......you must have been at LeMans I guess? Regards David Lovely i6 has now gone, but not me...... Please let me know if anything in my post offends you, as I may wish to offend you again...... |
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30th Apr 2020 9:22 am |
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Boxbrownie Member Since: 17 Mar 2019 Location: Looe Posts: 2053 |
Easiest way to free up locked alloys, is loosen all the nuts (don’t take any off!) and move the car a little a foot or so and brake hard....usually does the job......the nuts need only loose enough to give some play at the wheel nut cone seating, so just a few turns if that. Regards David Lovely i6 has now gone, but not me...... Please let me know if anything in my post offends you, as I may wish to offend you again...... |
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30th Apr 2020 9:25 am |
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jules Member Since: 13 Dec 2007 Location: The Wilds of Warwickshire Posts: 5061 |
Except the car is usually up on the jack with all the nuts off before you discover it wont budge. But If no boiling kettle handy that obviously works. Jules |
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30th Apr 2020 9:56 am |
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Bobupndown Member Since: 26 Dec 2014 Location: Upside down behind the TV! Posts: 2816 |
A tyre fitter broke a deadblow hammer and had to resort to a sledge hammer to remove the front wheels of my Disco 2 when it first needed replacement tyres in my ownership, said hed never seen anything like it.
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30th Apr 2020 10:49 am |
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MotionInc Member Since: 17 Jun 2019 Location: North America Posts: 1358 |
I simple will not use anti-seize on my nutz! Never gonna happen but you can clean the mating surfaces! AFAIK, it could throw off wheel torque values......
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30th Apr 2020 1:38 pm |
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AndyPP Member Since: 20 Jun 2017 Location: South Yorkshire Posts: 99 |
I put a bit of coppa slip on the mating surface of the alloy wheel and where the rotor sits against the hub. Just put too much on. Now I put some on rhe inner wheel surface and wipe off with a cloth so there is just a residue left. It seems to help with corrosion / seizing. Same for the bolts. |
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5th May 2020 7:57 pm |
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Boxbrownie Member Since: 17 Mar 2019 Location: Looe Posts: 2053 |
Andy is correct, smear Copaslip on the mating surface of the wheel and it’ll not seize.
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5th May 2020 8:33 pm |
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