Just thought I'd update on this thread

- it looks like its quite a common issue on Roadsters.

Last April, I noted the inner surfaces were glazing up again on new disks and pads, and the sliding pins had seized up.

As a temporary workaroud

( pending some parts arriving

) I found I could sandpaper the surface of the disk to remove the pad material glazed onto the disk to get back to a metal surface, and file the pad surface to again to remove the glaze.

That, plus re-lubing the sliding pins with Red caliper rubber grease much improved the breaking power.

However later, I found the pins had seized again, and cleaned and re-lubed with spray on Lithium grease.

The

'2 recently passed its MOT but with an advisory for scoring on the disks

- so I ordered up some Pagid Pads and Disks from Euro car parts for

£76 delivered to see if it was a Toyota pad material issue possibly causing this.

Taking it all apart this afternoon to fit, the Lithium grease had dried out

- having tried all the different greases you can get locally

( I can't get specifically sliding pin grease

)

, I've ordered up from Bigg Red some high temperature silicon grease for sliding pins

-
http://r.ebay.com/kDiIfo

The Pagid disks looked good

- much better than the pattern parts I've had before, and they were painted up with what looks to be something rust-resistant.

The Pads are

'standard' items but I noted that

the edges of the pads are chamfered at quite a shallow angle so that on the new pads only about 2/3rds of the total pad surface is in contact with the disc.

I've got to bed in the new pads and disks, but they do work acceptably well from being installed, but oviously are wearing off the surface coating.
