Brake pads OEM Toyota or OEM Mazda

OEM Mazda Brake pads

I bought the Mazda a while ago and hated it. I improved my skills and bought it again last night. It was a fucking blast. Have to be careful with the brakes and backend sliding but it is a straights rocket and has decent cornering without any assists.

Pros: straights rocket, decent cornering
Cons: careful with the brakes
Vehicle: Mazda
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OEM Mazda Brake pads
primalspy
  • Braking:
Rating 5.0

My 2011 2.5 has 220,000 miles on it and it is the most reliable car I’ve owned yet. I bought it used with 45k miles and I have only replaced the tires once, the brake pads once, one engine mount, all belts including timing, and that’s pretty much it. The transmission still shifts pretty smoothly.

Pros: reliable, smooth transmission
Vehicle: Mazda
Mileage: 220000 km
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OEM Toyota Brake pads
Samson
  • Braking:
Rating 4.0

One thing that I am surprised by are the brakes. They're still fine at 110k, and it's not like this 4,000lb beast has EV-levels of regen.

Pros: brakes still fine
Vehicle: Toyota
Mileage: 110000 km
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OEM Toyota Brake pads
The_Shepherds_2019
  • Braking:
  • Noise:
  • Dust:
Rating 5.0

I'm now at 120k miles. Still have over 4mm on both the front and rear pads, and the rotors look fine. So that's at least 50k miles I'll get out of a set of OEM brakes, but I expect more like 75k. 6 speed hatchback if it makes any difference.

I can't imagine a situation where I replace them with anything other than OEM Toyota parts. They've lasted an impressive amount of time, rarely squeak, and don't make any dust.

Pros: long lasting, no squeaking, little dust
Mileage: 120000 km
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OEM Mazda Brake pads

Changed the pads front and rear was super easy and straight forward.Then after taking the car out of 'electric brake service mode' and starting the car I get the a yellow check engine light and code C05AB, clearing it made no difference. Only thing I could find online was "The electronically controlled brake unit detects that the pressure feed valve (primary side) is stuck ON (OPEN)."

Pros: easy installation, straightforward
Cons: check engine light, code C05AB
Vehicle: Mazda 3
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OEM Toyota Brake pads
omvargas
  • Braking:
Rating 2.0

This happened to my Gen2. I gave it to some guy to change pads and these lights came out after. I think he didn't do it properly and air entered into the line. I then took it to a local Toyota dealership where they fixed it. (I don't recall what they did exactly, maybe flush and replaced the break fluid). I was fearing it was the actuator, which as other have posted, is very expensive on this Prius. I had to drive very slow and careful, because I had no power in the brakes, so they were hard and slow. No ABS. No regen either.

Pros: fixed by dealership
Cons: no brake power, hard brakes
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OEM Mazda Brake pads

Mazda. Brakes. Suck. I’ve owned 2 6s. A 2018 and a 2021. Both needed brakes at around 20k. DO NOT REPLACE WITH MAZDA OE BRAKES. Or you’ll just be in the same boat again. Buy a set of PowerStops and be done with it.

Cons: brakes wear quickly
Vehicle: Mazda 6
Mileage: 20000 km
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