Brake discs OEM Honda or OEM Volkswagen

OEM Volkswagen Brake discs
ravenflies
  • Vibration:
Rating 4.0

I had the impression that those discs wouldn’t warp as easy as one piece discs but it looks as I was wrong. VW tried to machine my warped discs with them mounted on the car at one point but they failed so badly that they did not even want to show me the result. After that they messured the runout on new discs on the bench and found them OK. After the discs were mounted on the hubs they were messured again and that one of them had warped. That was the way they found the bad hub. I was quite surprised when I was told that VW did not have any tolerances for the runout on the hubs or the discs. I took for granted that they had quite strict tolerances both on the hubs and the discs. I don’t know if the eight piston caliper and the setup with opposed pistons makes the whole system more sensitive to warpage or not but that has been suggested. And to get this a bit more connected to the thread subject I can add that I have not found any alternative to VW original 365 mm floating discs at all. I was quite surprised to find them cheaper than the one piece 334 mm discs to my Passat W8 though.

Pros: original discs available, cheaper than expected
Cons: discs warp easily, no tolerances found
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
OEM Volkswagen Brake discs
ravenflies
  • Braking:
  • Vibration:
Rating 4.5

Could be the hubs. Mine had an axial throw of 0,02-0,03 mm which I thought wouldn’t affect the discs. I filed a complainment to VW regarding warped discs and they blamed the calipers. Told me one of eight pistons was a bit sluggish. With new calipers and two sets of discs later they found what I had meassured before the complainment, a warped hub. The last pair have not warped after the typical 5000 km mark as before. So at least the floating 365 mm discs are very sensitive regarding straight hubs.

Pros: hubs corrected, discs no longer warp
Cons: calipers initially blamed, sensitive hubs
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
OEM Volkswagen Brake discs

That being said, it would be great to see a basic writeup with pics of the fronts and rears being changed. I ordered and received some new slotted/drilled rotors with ceramic pads. When ordering, I just used the GTI as the model, since it uses the same brake rotors as the TDI, 312mm F, 272mm R - IIRC. If I have time, I will get some pics and write a rudimentary writeup on it. Not sure if I have time/patience to tackle this myself so I may just have my Audi/VW guy do the work (he has many more tools and 2 lifts). In any case, I will try to get some info and pics in here.

Pros: slotted/drilled rotors with ceramic pads
Cons: requires professional installation
Vehicle: Volkswagen
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
OEM Volkswagen Brake discs
dmcdayton
  • Vibration:
Rating 4.0

Just discussed this last week. I side with my VW dealer on it. They recommend just replacing the rotors, its really not that much more than having them turned, considering you almost guarantee no pulsation, no shimmy or shudder and more even brake wear.

Pros: more even brake wear
Cons: rotors need replacement
Vehicle: Volkswagen
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
OEM Volkswagen Brake discs
Irish Phaeton
  • Braking:
  • Vibration:
Rating 3.0

Eventually it was deemed that the brake discs had become faulty, giving a vibration on braking and there was high speed vibration caused by unbalanced tyres. Front discs replaced, braking vibration gone.

Pros: braking vibration gone
Cons: brake discs faulty
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
OEM Volkswagen Brake discs
Estate
  • Braking:
Rating 3.0

Mine are 288 fronts (yeah, I measured) and combined with the pitiful rears the whole systems is not (as I've read many times) "sufficient for daily driving". Too many times I've worried I won't stop in time. Too many times I've come down an average hill with definite fade that made me worry should an animal dart out in front of me. I want something akin to my GTI's brakes. Not something that will stop a freight train but just something I know will stop. And stop firm every time. Definitely OEM . I'd rather not have red but whatever I have, it will have to match front/rear. After reading the limited information I can find across multiple forums, nothing has mentioned swapping the front TDI brakes (if they are actually 310mm) over to a 2.5l. It would seem that if the caliper is the same 2.5 to TDI, all you would really need is the rotor and the TDI carrier, correct? Regarding the rears, nothing seems available straight off the OEM shelf, except GTI, correct? Any non-red options there?

Pros: stop firm every time
Cons: pitiful rears, definite fade, insufficient for daily driving
Vehicle: Volkswagen
Comment
Is this review helpful?
source
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

Write your review

Help others - share your experience with this part.

Other comparisons
Loading...