Brake pads WAGNER or OEM Mazda

OEM Mazda Brake pads
pixbabysok
  • Braking:
Rating 4.5

Im late to this but ill chime in anyways.

Mine is a 2008 AWD GT with every option. Mileage is 130k. And I run on Regular gas.

By todays standards its a gas guzzler, and even thirsty in 2008, but CRVs werent hugely better.

Ive done nothing to it. Still on original brake pads. And recently replaced the rear wheel bearings.

I dont know why im so lucky except that i do oil changes frequently.

One thing about driving older cars is they arent narcing your driving habits to Mazda. Good to know about insurance.

Since it is top line, it has the Bose system which is decent, but i replaced the head so i could get Bluetooth.

I sincerely believe this car has at least 5 years life left in it.

Pros: reliable, long lasting
Cons: gas guzzler
Vehicle: Mazda
Mileage: 130000 km
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OEM Mazda Brake pads

My 12 of this generation is at 222k miles with just oil changes and tires as well. One set of pads and rotors at 175k and still had life left.

Pros: reliable and lowest maintenance
Vehicle: Mazda 2
Mileage: 357271 km
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WAGNER Brake pads

I used closesale WAGNER OEX906A (Premium) OEX and closesale AUTO EXTRA AX31314. they actually works amazing, especially auto extra with "P" is semi-coated with a little bit more price, I have very good experience with them and actually recommends it if you want to be cheap

Pros: amazing, works well
Vehicle: Toyota
Part number: WAGNER OEX906A, AUTO EXTRA AX31314
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OEM Mazda Brake pads
PhilHVW
  • Braking:
Rating 3.0

Surprisingly, it needed brake pads and rotors at 21k miles, and at $1,100 at a trusted local mechanic, it wasn't as cheap as I expected. When I bought the car with 1,400 miles on it, the piano black trim inside the car was already scratched, and it looks quite a bit worse now. I also have to echo the thin paint comments from above, I've never seen a car that scratches so easily. The car's manners on the highway at 70 mph+ are a little nervous for me. On the plus side, I've always enjoyed the way the car looks and drives around town. The interior does look way better than the original MSRP would suggest (even with scratches). And we've had no surprising issues, other than the early brake job.

Pros: enjoyed the way car looks
Cons: thin paint, scratches easily
Vehicle: Mazda 3
Mileage: 33796 km
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OEM Mazda Brake pads

Had the same scenario with my cx30 after changing the brakes, only the car messages were things such as engine malfunction and dynamic control malfunction which is ridiculous. Clearing the fault using a Bluetooth obd and the torque app was enough for me, thanks for the post.

Pros: easy fault clearing
Cons: engine malfunction, dynamic control malfunction
Vehicle: Mazda
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OEM Mazda Brake pads
TheSaSQuatCh
  • Braking:
  • Noise:
Rating 1.0

I put OEM Brakes on my ‘19 3 GT AWD. I’m 20K KM into them, and they pulse like mad when I brake above 90KM/h. Absolute fucking trash. The factory brakes also did this, above 90KM, but started around 50K into their life.

Cons: pulsating brakes, poor quality
Vehicle: Mazda 3
Mileage: 20000 km
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OEM Mazda Brake pads

Mazda brakes are notoriously shit. They’re garbage. Buy a set of PowerStop brakes and be done with it. They’re far superior to the Mazda brakes. Go on any forum and you’ll see countless people having the same issue as you. New brakes between 15-20,000 miles. Me included. I’ve owned 2 6s from new. Both needed brakes around 20,000 miles. Both times I put on PowerStops and never had another issue.

Pros: PowerStop superior, no more issues
Cons: Mazda brakes garbage
Vehicle: Mazda 6
Mileage: 20000 km
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