uneven left vs right rear brake pad wear
#1
Drifting
Thread Starter
uneven left vs right rear brake pad wear
- figured this was the forum to ask the question on
- my car 997gt3 with ceramics but running the motorsport green pads
- the stock pads were wearing very fast so i decided to try the greens (went through 5 sets of the stocks)
- the greens definitely last longer (much longer) but i noticed something with these greens that didn't happen with the stock pads (maybe because they went so fast, maybe it was because i was running a bunch of different tracks, maybe i'm trail braking more as i get faster, maybe the Paul Guard 50/80 LSD is causing it)
the issue
- the left rear pads were much more worn than the right rears
- i have done a bunch of days (almost all at Mosport in Toronto)
- Mosport is a clockwise track
- can anyone explain why the left side rear pads would wear more than the right side?
- i have some guesses but i would like some feedback from the track pros
thanks
paul
- my car 997gt3 with ceramics but running the motorsport green pads
- the stock pads were wearing very fast so i decided to try the greens (went through 5 sets of the stocks)
- the greens definitely last longer (much longer) but i noticed something with these greens that didn't happen with the stock pads (maybe because they went so fast, maybe it was because i was running a bunch of different tracks, maybe i'm trail braking more as i get faster, maybe the Paul Guard 50/80 LSD is causing it)
the issue
- the left rear pads were much more worn than the right rears
- i have done a bunch of days (almost all at Mosport in Toronto)
- Mosport is a clockwise track
- can anyone explain why the left side rear pads would wear more than the right side?
- i have some guesses but i would like some feedback from the track pros
thanks
paul
#4
Rennlist Member
When you say much more, are we talking about like 20 to 30% more? i I have never seen a left right differential. Thinking trail braking and turning left would cause more load on the outside left but I don't think that can explain it. check the location and condition of the pad retaining spring on the left. if it was not centered it could cause some excessive wear, otherwise I am clueless.
#5
Drifting
Thread Starter
When you say much more, are we talking about like 20 to 30% more? i I have never seen a left right differential. Thinking trail braking and turning left would cause more load on the outside left but I don't think that can explain it. check the location and condition of the pad retaining spring on the left. if it was not centered it could cause some excessive wear, otherwise I am clueless.
- left rear pads maybe 2mms left
- right rear pads 6mm left
- fronts as usually more like 8 to 10mm
- the Motorsport Greens come about 2-3mm thicker than the stock ceramic pads which have about 10mm of material when new
- i check if the pistons on both rears and everything appears to be working
- what i'm left with is thinking that it must be trail braking on a clockwise track (left side wheels turning and braking more than the right side) and when i added my Paul Guard 50/80 LSD it has allowed the car to be even more stable under braking and thus i must be using even more trail braking
- if this isn't it then i must have left the tc button a few times and missed it
#6
Nordschleife Master
I am getting 30-40% more wear of front left pad then the right front pad. Rears appear to be even.
At Mosport which I am trail braking in 4 right hand corners 1, 3, 5, 8 and not I am not really doing any in the left hand corners.
Thinking the left front is doing the most braking since it is the loaded wheel. This is in a 996tt with PSM on. PSM is never disabled while braking regardless of being on/off with this car.
At Mosport which I am trail braking in 4 right hand corners 1, 3, 5, 8 and not I am not really doing any in the left hand corners.
Thinking the left front is doing the most braking since it is the loaded wheel. This is in a 996tt with PSM on. PSM is never disabled while braking regardless of being on/off with this car.
#7
Nordschleife Master
When you install our LSD on that chassis, we pretty much universally hear about a reduction in the rate of rear brake pad wear because the more aggressive LSD makes it so that the traction control become much less active.
If the LSD is contributing to the pad wear in any way, I would suspect that it is as you mentioned, because you are now trail braking harder than you did previously.
If the LSD is contributing to the pad wear in any way, I would suspect that it is as you mentioned, because you are now trail braking harder than you did previously.
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#8
Could also be ABS. On clockwise course, right rear tire will typically be lightly loaded, and more prone to lock-up, so makes sense it should have consistently less use and wear under trail-braking situations.
#9
Three Wheelin'
This! Its very probable its ABS causing what you see as uneven wear left to right. Even if you're not feeling the pedal pulsing it may very well still be active, especially while trail braking. With lateral load transfer the outside wheels will have more capability to produce brake force and ABS will be actively reducing it on the inside, therefore you would definitely see varied wear rates.
#10
I experience the uneven wear with my 987 also. I've used stick on indicators to look at caliper temps and found the left side (higher wear) calipers run hotter. So they appear to be doing more work.