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I have a 21' Hyundai Accent which was basically the sedan version of the Venue before the Accent got axed. I live in the NE so I've encountered plenty of road salt as well as coastal salt/driving through minor coastal flooding. My car has basically zero rust underneath. I wash it immediately (within 24 hours) of driving through coastal flooding or winter treated roads, or as soon as temps go above freezing. Shit, I've got 80k on this car on the original brake pads and there's NO rust on the rotors or calipers, which to me is an unexpected surprise for someone who drives in corrosive conditions.
On the other hand, all I did to it was change oil, brake pads, tires and spark plugs. Ran all the time, snow, sun, rain. Drove it everywhere. Put loads of miles on it.
Since purchasing in summer of 24 have replaced the battery and both back and front brakes. Also very strict with oil changes. Loving everything about it.
I have a 2013 Hyundai accent glass. But it works and no serious issues. Just the common brakes and tires. Great on gas. Has some pep. And fits 5 people easily. Big trunk space.
I have a 2020 Hyundai Santa Fe with 30,000 and still has the original pads and aren't worn out yet.
I bought a bike off a coworker and took it in to be serviced. Turns out the bike I bought was the equivalent of a model T Ford. They didn't make the brake pads for my model any more kinda old.
The \u201ctaga-alagang\u201d mechanic nung seller said it was just a \u201cbraking issue\u201d since matagal daw na unused yung unit. Need daw ireplace yung brake pads.
Fiesta ST brakes are terrible. Just replace the discs and pads....again....
When we bought our Ford lightening... the sales person told me with a strait face "people think that evs go through less brakes, but really its actually rhe opposite" when trying to sell me a maintenance package...
only thing I hate about it are the brakes, but it's a hyundai thing, the brake pedal travel is too low
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We compare brake pads across these categories:
In March 2026 on PartReview, brake pads OEM Hyundai were overall better than OEM FORD.
Brake pads OEM FORD and OEM Hyundai were equally popular according to data in March 2026.
By vote balance, brake pads OEM Hyundai surpassed OEM FORD:
By number of reviews, brake pads OEM FORD surpassed OEM Hyundai:
In March 2026, according to PartReview, brake pads OEM FORD led more car-specific ratings than OEM Hyundai:
OEM FORD are chosen by owners of cars such as: Ford Focus, and others.
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For example, comparisons of brake pads OEM FORD with: EBC, POWER STOP, Akebono, Hawk Performance, Brembo, Ferodo, OEM Volkswagen, Bosch, STOPTECH, Carbotech.
Also available: comparisons of brake pads OEM Hyundai with: EBC, POWER STOP, Akebono, Hawk Performance, Brembo, Ferodo, OEM Volkswagen, Bosch, STOPTECH, Carbotech.
You can also see who is better among other brake pads manufacturers: EBC or POWER STOP, EBC or Akebono, EBC or Hawk Performance, Brembo or EBC, Akebono or POWER STOP.