โJul-27-2023 02:24 PM
โSep-07-2023 03:19 PM
โSep-07-2023 11:42 AM
โSep-07-2023 11:37 AM
Grit dog wrote:
Lol, thatโs literally the best part of this forum! Well, thereโs several. From people who ask where to poop ?? if they get a camper with no toilet, to the pseudo โsponsoredโ โseniorโ members who think belonging to a forum a long time gives them street cred!
In all fairness, 12V is a good dude and knows his โstuffโ. Even if he lets you know how much he knows, regularly.
โAug-21-2023 12:33 AM
StonedPanther wrote:My milage was not that high, but the pads had a LOT of life left. I believe they can go that far.Huntindog wrote:
I put 126K on my 2011 without touching the brakes. 95K
on my 2011 (sold it early to avoid CP4 problems). My dealer has mentioned that they miss the brake job revenue they used to make.
Bottom line: brakes just are not a problem on these trucks
Ok, 126K. That's a longshot off from 260K LOL, and don't believe what your dealer says as he was probably flipping burgers last week at Micky D's LOL.
โAug-20-2023 10:07 PM
โAug-20-2023 12:49 PM
Grit dog wrote:MNRon wrote:
Unfortunate that some walk around with a chip on their shoulders these days just wanting toโprove others wrongโ and not willing to take them at their word.
For the record, i also have experienced much better pad mileage on my trucks than when I used to drive a Mustang convertible in the โ80โs. My 2002 YukonXL 8.1 gasser was traded in in 2013 with 180k miles and original brakes (mostly city driving with work etc). My 2013 Duramax was traded in in 2022, again with about 180k miles and original brakes, this pulled a 15k 5er about a third of those miles or more including over the Rockies several times (it did have an exhaust brake which was always used when towing).
My 2022 F350 now has 26,000 miles on it, the majority towing a 16k 5er. Brakes are fine, but it sure seems to put more brake dust on the front wheels than I remember with the GMs, not sure I want these pads to last as long ๐
FWIW, I drive ~63mph on the Interstate pulling, but frankly do 80%+ of my driving on highways on backroads.
GM has been using ceramic pads for quite some time now. The last new Super Duty I had was a 2015 and neither it nor my 2016 Ram personal truck came with OE ceramic pads. They were both dust monsters. Idk about the newer models of either, since all my company trucks have been GMs since that 2015 Ford.
Good news is it costs approximately 1/4 of 1% of the cost of a new loaded SuperDuty, or less than 1 full tank of diesel here in Seattle to make the brake dust problem literally disappearโฆ.
โAug-20-2023 09:53 AM
โAug-20-2023 09:23 AM
MNRon wrote:
Unfortunate that some walk around with a chip on their shoulders these days just wanting toโprove others wrongโ and not willing to take them at their word.
For the record, i also have experienced much better pad mileage on my trucks than when I used to drive a Mustang convertible in the โ80โs. My 2002 YukonXL 8.1 gasser was traded in in 2013 with 180k miles and original brakes (mostly city driving with work etc). My 2013 Duramax was traded in in 2022, again with about 180k miles and original brakes, this pulled a 15k 5er about a third of those miles or more including over the Rockies several times (it did have an exhaust brake which was always used when towing).
My 2022 F350 now has 26,000 miles on it, the majority towing a 16k 5er. Brakes are fine, but it sure seems to put more brake dust on the front wheels than I remember with the GMs, not sure I want these pads to last as long ๐
FWIW, I drive ~63mph on the Interstate pulling, but frankly do 80%+ of my driving on highways on backroads.
โAug-20-2023 09:17 AM
StonedPanther wrote:scootsk wrote:
My goodness. I started this thread to find out if using carbon fiber ceramic pads are compatible with stock rotors. I never, in a million years, thought that it would cause the same stir as Ford v. Chevy v. Ram. Lol
I'll see your Ford/Chevy/Ram and raise you an ST/LT Tire and a tongue weight percentage.
โAug-20-2023 08:47 AM
โAug-20-2023 04:42 AM
Huntindog wrote:
I put 126K on my 2011 without touching the brakes. 95K
on my 2011 (sold it early to avoid CP4 problems). My dealer has mentioned that they miss the brake job revenue they used to make.
Bottom line: brakes just are not a problem on these trucks
โAug-20-2023 04:37 AM
โAug-20-2023 04:29 AM
scootsk wrote:
My goodness. I started this thread to find out if using carbon fiber ceramic pads are compatible with stock rotors. I never, in a million years, thought that it would cause the same stir as Ford v. Chevy v. Ram. Lol
โAug-20-2023 04:22 AM
fj12ryder wrote:
Yeah, you just can't trust all these liars. FWIW the head wrench turner at any dealer was probably flipping burgers at Micky D's yesterday.
Kind of boils down to "You're wrong" vs "All these other people are liars". Hmm, that's a tough one.
โAug-19-2023 06:52 PM
scootsk wrote:
My goodness. I started this thread to find out if using carbon fiber ceramic pads are compatible with stock rotors. I never, in a million years, thought that it would cause the same stir as Ford v. Chevy v. Ram. Lol