
The issue i have is every online finder seems to only let you search by the make model of car/van rather than the code on the pad itself.
anyone know the best way to get a match?
the code on them is FM5 F201/3
Because when i do, the ones it comes up with are a totally different shape. My van has quite a lot of mods and i think the brakes are not standard.mik wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 9:31 pm Is this because you are keen to have identical replacements?
Why not just search as per your model / reg and select the brand you fancy?
good call - Ive tracked down the right brake with an OE part number, just got to find a way to translate that to the pad spec!Mito Man wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 9:38 pm Look on your caliper for a part number for that. Then go from there.
Aren't EVs supposed to use regen so much you barely need to use the brakes, and only replace them after a million miles?mik wrote: Mon Jun 30, 2025 10:04 pm I ordered pads and discs for Mrs mik’s etron. Discs look fine (massive 375mm jobs - weight of a small moon each) but the pads (as per the website) are about 1/3 the size of the originals. So they are en-route back….
Edit - those discs are larger diameter than the wheels on the first five cars that I owned![]()
The car is giving a pad-sensor message approx 1/3 of the times it is driven, so a sensor is clearly just being exposed. I've had a couple of wheels off and reckon rears are fine and there is still 3-4mm left on the front pads, so I'd estimate another couple of thousand miles will be fine. Car is 4.5years old on the original pads/discs.Jobbo wrote: Tue Jul 01, 2025 7:55 am
Aren't EVs supposed to use regen so much you barely need to use the brakes, and only replace them after a million miles?
fair play Mik, i think you did have the right pads!mik wrote: Tue Jul 01, 2025 8:36 am Top tip from Harry (although my link is correctalbeit probably the most expensive option
)
Watching Johnny Smith's Tesla video, he takes it to an EV specialist who apparently now skim disks regularly because of this.mik wrote: Tue Jul 01, 2025 8:36 amThe car is giving a pad-sensor message approx 1/3 of the times it is driven, so a sensor is clearly just being exposed. I've had a couple of wheels off and reckon rears are fine and there is still 3-4mm left on the front pads, so I'd estimate another couple of thousand miles will be fine. Car is 4.5years old on the original pads/discs.Jobbo wrote: Tue Jul 01, 2025 7:55 am
Aren't EVs supposed to use regen so much you barely need to use the brakes, and only replace them after a million miles?
It is a constant battle to hold back corrosion on the discs. I'm repeating myself, but whenever I drive the car I slip it into neutral (to disable regen) and do a heavy stop from 60-ish to walking pace to clean the discs - at least a little bit. Despite this, every recent service and MOT still mentions light surface corrosion on the discs as an advisory....
When the Lotus Drivers Club organsied a trip to the Edinburgh service centre, techs advised that more than 50% of the discs they replace are due to corrosion rather than wear.
Top tip from Harry (although my link is correctalbeit probably the most expensive option
)
Always happy to pass on something which someone might find usefulRich B wrote: Tue Jul 01, 2025 12:01 am Just as Harry said - that’s exactly the sort of wisdom i needed on the matter!