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Brake pad life

Discussion in 'Prius v Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by jonb505, Apr 8, 2013.

  1. jonb505

    jonb505 Member

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    Maybe i'm just weird but i'm always excited to see the % pad life remaining report whenever my car goes in for a routine brake service. :)
    My last car was an 08 Honda fit 5spd and when i sold it at 200,000km i had just replaced the original front pads and rotors at 180,000km and the rear drums still had half their life left according to the the last service report.

    With that said my prius v recently went in for its 32000km service, the first major one where they service the brakes. Pad life was reported at 85% front / 87% rear. I was kind of surprised at the even wear front and back but perhaps that is how most cars are with 4 wheel discs? (All my previous cars had rear drums)
    I consider myself pretty easy on the brakes so its a little more wear than i expected, considering if they actually were at 100% to start with from the factory, not sure how they do their calculations.

    Anyhow has anyone else had a brake service already or perhaps more than one and care to share their "pad life remaining"? Are my results typical for the v?
     
    JMD likes this.
  2. Toyota Minnesota

    Toyota Minnesota Junior Member

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    I hear you. I had the "exact" same experience, and have been told by everyone, and the service manager, that the breaks will last for a long, long time. Here's the thing...the brakes are part of the battery recharging system, so even if you are braking gingerly, these puppies must be working overtime to generate power for the engine. But in answer to your question, you're not in the minority here.
     
  3. F8L

    F8L Protecting Habitat & AG Lands

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    That is completely wrong. The brake pads are not recharging the battery and thus not being applied all the time. My GenII was sold with 158,000 miles and still had 50% pad life. :) The hydraulic brakes don't even kick in until below 10mph or so unless braking hard.
     
  4. JMD

    JMD 2012 Prius 4 Solar Roof

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    Yep I agree that is a little weird. Now you may find 2 girls in nighties on your bed exciting
    But a Brake Pad report that may just be informative.

    image.jpg
     
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  5. mahout

    mahout Active Member

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    Shops used to do that but to my knowledge we're the only one that still measures the pad thickness. Its simple enough to do but does require 3-4 minutes per disc braked wheel so there's the cost; will you add $10 t your inspection charge?Most people will just wait til someone tells them that screeching noise is the brake sensor that goes on when the pad gets down to 2mm thick. And nobody checks shoe thickness on drum brakes. You couldn't afford it. As for z%, few brake padss are the same tickness so the % left is an individual calculation for each car and that adds another $5 to the bill.
     
  6. Peter Fanelli

    Peter Fanelli Junior Member

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    I'll have to check the receipts I got with the car from it's first owner but I've just had the front pads on my 2005 changed at 223,000 miles. It had 113,000 miles on it when I got it and this is the first time I've changed them. Might be the first time they've ever been changed.
     
  7. xpcman

    xpcman Senior Member

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    87% is just a garbage number that they throw at you. They would need to measure down to a tenth of a millimeter to get that kind of accuracy.
    8787
     
  8. douglasjre

    douglasjre Senior Member

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    Do u always make up explanations and report them as fact?
     
  9. JimboPalmer

    JimboPalmer Tsar of all the Rushers

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    The Prius has several braking systems: (one reason NOT to mess with the brakes unless you are trained on the Prius)

    Friction Brakes (Disc and or Drum brakes) which convert rotational energy to waste heat, are always used at low speed (under 10 MPH), when you PANIC stop, and as you try to de-accelerate faster than the regenerative brakes can transfer energy to the battery.

    Regenerative brakes (mostly Motor/Generator 2, but also M/G1 in some scenarios) use rotational energy to charge the HV battery, used in gentle braking up to the amount of charge the battery can accept until it is 'full' in the opinion of Toyota's software.

    Engine braking rotates the engine as an air pump to generate waste heat and is used when the HV battery is 'full' and when you choose the B mode. (PIP may work different in B)
     
  10. camry25

    camry25 Junior Member

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    how long does your brakes last with 90% city traffic?
     
  11. cproaudio

    cproaudio Speedlock Overrider

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    My dealer never report percentage. They always report brake pad thickness in millimeter, same with tire thread life.
     
  12. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    ^ I'd prefer that. Actually could never understand how they come up with the percent statement. Remaining pad thickness (or tread depth) is simple, clear.

    It also forces the owners to learn a bit, get an understanding of what the numbers mean.

    Or not, lol.
     
  13. anewhouse

    anewhouse Active Member

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    I don't know if they're typical for the v in general, but you're definitely not alone! I replaced my front pads at around 45K miles (still had 3-4 mm of pad remaining), and rears around 50K miles (pads basically shot, making noise, maybe 1-2mm left max). Pretty good for a normal car, but I was surprised to see them go so fast in a Prius - I've heard from friends (and seen on here) that 100K mi on a set of pads is not unusual. I was especially surprised to see the rears wear so fast. Maybe the v is heavier, maybe it's our driving habits or (hilly rural) landscape, who knows why this came out different than some non-v Prii.
    I'm not concerned enough to call the dealership or anything - 40-50K mi on a set of pads is acceptable to me!
     
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  14. cy2k

    cy2k Junior Member

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    I was really glad to read this... Just doing some searching, since my mechanic just told me that my 2012 v w/ 55k miles needed rear pads and rotors... totally shot, and dragging, but for some reason not making noise like they're supposed to when they get low! Meanwhile, the front one's still have 50% left. They thought it was odd as well, but they haven't seen many v's come in yet, so it must just be a v thing. They said the drums on the regular Prius's last a lot longer, and since the v has discs rear, that could be part of it.

    Still, I was really surprised, like others on this thread, since I'd always heard that "Prius's never need brakes", etc.

    Anyone got any tips for good online parts stores?
     
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  15. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    My cheapo vernier caliper gives me repeatable measurements to two hundredths of a millimeter, no sweat. The lining thicknesses when new, and the minimum thickness for end of life, are both published in the manuals. Measure, subtract, divide. What's the problem?

    -Chap
     
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  16. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    What I find weird is: it's hard as heck to come up with a percent, which service writers so often relay to customers. Dead easy would be to just say, for example: you've got 3mm remaining.
     
  17. CR94

    CR94 Senior Member

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    Evidently they find it easier "to come up with a percent" than to explain to a typical customer the significance of "3 mm remaining."
     
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  18. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Yeah, that's what I'm thinking. Still, I like the immediacy of, again for example: "2 (flakey and debatable) mm between me and certain death", lol. Anytime it's measuring 3 mm or less, I'm getting new pads.
     
  19. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Especially because the "significance of 3 mm remaining" is indeterminate without the percent!

    Suppose you're driving a Gen 1 or a Gen 2 and somebody tells you your rears have 3 mm remaining and your fronts have 4? What does that tell you?

    Considering the rear shoes came with 4 mm linings when new, if those are only down to 3 by now (and the limit is 1), you will probably never own the car long enough to replace them.

    Now if those fronts, 11 mm when new, are down to 4 in the same time period, you not only have a pad replacement in the foreseeable future, you'd also better figure out what's wrong with your brakes.

    Somebody telling you "down to 3 mm rear, down to 4 mm front" doesn't tell you what you need to know, unless you have also memorized the specs from the manual so you can subtract, divide, and find the percent in your head. If they tell you "down to 67% rear, down to 30% front" you have what you need to know in one step. How is that not easier?

    -Chap
     
  20. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    If it's just disc brakes it pretty straight forward. And drum brakes, regardless of their drawbacks, seem to last forever lol.