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Rear Brake Wear


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My car just finished it's 60K maintenance. The rear brakes are moderately worn (more than the front) and I am concerned as to why. They did not report any other issues.

 

I was trying to figure out why this may happen and I remembered that the car has a feature where the brakes will stay applied when the car is stopped on an uphill (to prevent rollback). Would this have anything to do with it or should I be concerned that there is another issue..

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I would assume that all the brakes are applied not just one set front or rear with the feature you are describing. My 2011 has the same feature, but I am unsure if it would just be the rear brakes. Seems like it would be all the brakes. Interesting but I do not have an answer for you, but will watch to see if anyone else does.

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The brakes would not wear down just because they are being used as a "hold" on hills. In order for the pads to wear, the rotors would have to be moving and the pads then applied against them. When sitting, the rotors are not moving and the pads are acting as a clamp. Soon as you start to move, the pads release.

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From reading around the net, using the rear brakes first/more was a conscious design decision to prevent nosedive in hard braking/emergency situations. People who drive in reverse and brake like cops/stuntpeople are outta luck :)

http://www.fordedgeforum.com/topic/13292-how-long-should-brake-pads-last/?do=findComment&comment=103656

Edited by WWWPerfA_ZN0W
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Why the extra wear on the rears? I am guessing it is how you drive and the driving patterns. Tons of city driving may cause the rears to wear more and light driving with lower traction could cause the rears to employ more often causing the extra wear. For me I am all highway so I guess I tend to wear the brakes less but use more front brake due to the higher speed and sometimes hard/shorter stopping distances comparitively. Best answer I could come up with based on some short research.

 

Electronic Brake Force Distribution
Newer cars use the antilock brake hardware and the onboard computer to replace these proportioning valve systems with a system called Electronic Brake force Distribution (EBD) in order to distribute the exact amount of pressure at each wheel to insure a balanced brake system.

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From reading around the net, using the rear brakes first/more was a conscious design decision to prevent nosedive in hard braking/emergency situations. People who drive in reverse and brake like cops/stuntpeople are outta luck :)

http://www.fordedgeforum.com/topic/13292-how-long-should-brake-pads-last/?do=findComment&comment=103656

 

That's the most plausible explanation. With 4 channel ABS it's easy to change the bias dynamically and I could see the benefit to using more rear brake to prevent nosedive. My Lincoln LS did this with suspension geometry - you could slam on the brakes from 60 mph and it would stay dead level. But that expensive aluminum suspension was one of its downfalls.

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