Brake pads Hella Pagid or JURID

Hella Pagid Brake pads
jackofallmasterofzip
  • Braking:
  • Noise:
  • Dust:
Rating 4.0

Pagid Yellows (also branded as RS29) is what I have on my 987.2 track car. If you want a track only pad, I’ve had great experience with PFC08, but I’ve used that on my BMW128i track car, so take that into consideration. Both can be used to/from track driving too. Just be prepped for a lot of squeal. Both are dusty as they should so be aware of that as well.

Pros: great experience, durable
Cons: noisy, dusty
Vehicle: Porsche
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Hella Pagid Brake pads
shizmatango
  • Braking:
  • Noise:
Rating 4.0

I run Pagid yellows, and yeah, they love to squeal when they're cold. Cold, as in, like you said, not at track driving operating temperature. Occasional street driving is loud, but I don't concern myself with that.

Not only is the yellow pad performance better at the track, but they are Pagid's "endurance" pad, so, at least compared to stock, they last a good deal longer too. Performance and durability are easily worth a little noise to me.

Pros: good performance, long lasting
Cons: squeals when cold
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JURID Brake pads
FrumundaThunder
  • Braking:
  • Noise:
  • Dust:
Rating 4.0

Good braking, squeak free, low dust. The OE pads are great. They have good initial bite, no noise, high quality but they are semi-metallic so they make a bunch of dust. There are ceramic pad options that are low dust but they can be squeaky and won’t perform that great until they are warmed up. And of course you can get bargain bin organic pads which will have low dust but won’t perform nearly as well as stock. It’s a trade off no matter what. I went with the OE Jurid pads. I’d rather clean my wheels than lose braking performance or deal with noise. Also keep in mind that the rotors matter with noise and dust too.

Pros: good initial bite, high quality
Cons: lots of dust, semi-metallic
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Hella Pagid Brake pads
PrintError
  • Braking:
Rating 5.0

I put ~$120 worth of good Pagid pads on my 525i and had ZERO regrets. Especially for being freakin' $880 cheaper than the dealership! Brake pads take all of ten minutes to DIY, no reason to spend that much.

Pros: cheap, easy DIY
Vehicle: BMW
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JURID Brake pads
SILVERADO
  • Noise:
  • Dust:
Rating 4.0

Jurid,like Pagid and ATE,and Lucas/Girling are all OEM suppliers to VW,the Jurid pads are a OEM replacement and make a hell of a lot of dust,but are less likely to "squeek" due to their softer compound.

Pros: less likely to squeek
Cons: make a hell of dust
Vehicle: Volkswagen
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JURID Brake pads

When I picked her up, I was told my front and rear brake pads are all down 1mm already. At this rate I’ll likely need to replace them around 15k. I thought this made sense for the front pads since they’re the JURID high performance ones, but the rears being worn that much seemed strange. I don’t drive fast/brake hard/etc, never track, or do anything otherwise that should wear my brakes prematurely.

Cons: premature wear
Vehicle: Subaru
Mileage: 7000 km
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JURID Brake pads
adityaax
  • Braking:
Rating 3.5

Jurid = stock BMW E36M3 pads, pretty good on the street, not to good on the track. DOn't know if there are different types

Pros: good on the street
Cons: not good on the track
Vehicle: BMW
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