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| uk.rec.cars.vw.watercooled (VW Water-Cooled Cars) (uk.rec.cars.vw.watercooled) |
| Tags: brake, corroded, disks, mot |
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"Tom" wrote in message
... "Chris Whelan" wrote in message ... Michael Chare wrote: When my VW Passat was last serviced I was told that the front disks had corroded. This is true and there has been some corrosion at the edges. I have been reluctant to change the disks, as neither the disks or pads are near their wear limits, even after 45,000 miles and 5 years. The brakes work fine. However, the car is now due for its MOT, so my question is: Is the state of the disks an MOT failure point? Reason for rejection: "a brake disc or drum insecure, cracked or excessively scored, pitted or worn" See here, section h: http://www.motuk.co.uk/manual_350.htm Corrosion is not specifically mentioned. The friction material wear limit (WRT the MOT) is 1.5mm. I would imagine you would not get a fail. Chris -- Remove prejudice to reply. Corrosion on a brake disc tends to remove friction material from the pad, in much the same way that sandpaper/ emery paper removes material. Once the material is removed from the pad this relieves the pressure on this part of the contact area, thus allowing the build up of further rust, removing further brake pad material and further reducing contact surface, thus enhancing brake pad wear. In short, it's a descending spiral, a matter of judgement as to how far you are along the way and hence the need for replacement. Last one I replaced had a greatly differing amount of wear across the pads, with the most worn pad bearing on only about half the designed width of the disc, due to rust build up = MOT failure = urgent disc and pad replacement. Pads will not remove corrosion from discs in the course of use, it's a fallacy. If you can see the reduction in contact area of the pad (bright part on the disc) so can the MOT man and he may say, "Do that and bring it back when you have". I have now examined the disks. There is a rust area of about 1/4" across the pad starting from the centre of the outside surface of one disk. On the other disk there is a rust area on the inside surface for about 1/4" starting from the outer edge. The rust areas have polished peaks. Question is, is rhis bad enougth to fail an MOT test? -- Michael Chare |
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I have now examined the disks. There is a rust area of about 1/4" across the pad starting from the centre of the outside surface of one disk. On the other disk there is a rust area on the inside surface for about 1/4" starting from the outer edge. The rust areas have polished peaks. Question is, is rhis bad enougth to fail an MOT test? -- Michael Chare I think it will come down to whether braking efficiency is up to scratch. You might well get an advisary though. |
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Michael Chare was thinking very hard :
When my VW Passat was last serviced I was told that the front disks had corroded. This is true and there has been some corrosion at the edges. I have been reluctant to change the disks, as neither the disks or pads are near their wear limits, even after 45,000 miles and 5 years. The brakes work fine. Corrosion on the no (pad) contact areas of the disk is normal and no reason for concern. However, the car is now due for its MOT, so my question is: Is the state of the disks an MOT failure point? If the all the pad contact areas are clean, with no extensive grooving and the thickness of the disk is within spec., you have nothing to worry about. -- Regards, Harry (M1BYT) (L) http://www.ukradioamateur.co.uk |
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