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96 850 GLT Brake Pad, OEM or aftermarket?

Help, Advice and DIY Tutorials on Volvo's P80 platform cars -- Volvo's 1990s "bread and butter" cars -- powered by the ubiquitous and durable Volvo inline 5-cylinder engine.

1992 - 1997 850, including 850 R, 850 T-5R, 850 T-5, 850 GLT
1997 - 2000 S70, S70 AWD
1997 - 2000 V70, V70 AWD
1997 - 2000 V70-XC
1997 - 2004 C70

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joe_pinehill
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Volvo Repair Database 96 850 GLT Brake Pad, OEM or aftermarket?

Post by joe_pinehill »

I'm going to do the pads on my 850, are OEM the best for minimal noise? $75 and $40 for OEM from FCP, or are Raybestos, Beck Arnley , as good? The difference is about $40 vs OEM.
96 850 GLT
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instarx
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Post by instarx »

I won't pretend to have knowledge of all those pads, but I put Akebono ceramic pads and ATE rotors on mine and the combination has been great. No dust, no squealing and three years later they still stop smooth as butter. They were $65 for the front pads, $128 for the rotors including shipping. Shipping on rotors can get pricey - get them locally if you can.
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Post by jreed »

I used to use OEM front pads but was dissatisfied with all the dust they produced. I switched to Akebono pads (leaving the rotors as they were) about four years ago. They're great. Little or no dust, good braking power. Recommended!
1997 855 GLT (Light Pressure Turbo) still going strong. Previous: 1986 240 GL rusted out in '06, 1985 Saab 900T rusted out in '95, 1975 Saab 99 rusted out in '95, 1973 Saab 99 rusted out in '94

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Post by jblackburn »

Akenbono's are a fantastic match for this car, but not a good match for the OEM rotors. You'll want something a little harder (Zimmerman was my choice).
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Post by regent »

I've had great experience with Akebono Euro Ceramic on either Brembo or Zimmermann on every change. There are online suppliers who offer free shipping. Just shop around among FCP, ecstuning.com, autohausaz.com, etc. before you opt for a local source.

Also, it is vital that you do a nice bedding-in as soon as you install, regardless of what the rumors say. Overall job cleanliness and application of good brake grease (sparingly 8) ) on caliper pins, fingers, and bracket sliders works miracles in noise minimization.
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instarx
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Post by instarx »

regent wrote:Also, it is vital that you do a nice bedding-in as soon as you install, regardless of what the rumors say.
Since Akebono goes to the trouble of putting an insert in the box saying NOT to do bedding-in, its a bit more than a rumor.
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Post by oragex »

instarx wrote:I won't pretend to have knowledge of all those pads, but I put Akebono ceramic pads and ATE rotors on mine and the combination has been great. No dust, no squealing and three years later they still stop smooth as butter. They were $65 for the front pads, $128 for the rotors including shipping. Shipping on rotors can get pricey - get them locally if you can.
I will never put again ceramic pads on a city/highway driven car. The only place for ceramic pads is on hill areas or at the track. In city, compared with semi-metallic pads, the ceramic ones have no time to heat up and braking power and distance are worst. And ceramic tend to be noisier. Only advantage is cleanliness.

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Post by jblackburn »

oragex wrote:
instarx wrote:I won't pretend to have knowledge of all those pads, but I put Akebono ceramic pads and ATE rotors on mine and the combination has been great. No dust, no squealing and three years later they still stop smooth as butter. They were $65 for the front pads, $128 for the rotors including shipping. Shipping on rotors can get pricey - get them locally if you can.
I will never put again ceramic pads on a city/highway driven car. The only place for ceramic pads is on hill areas or at the track. In city, compared with semi-metallic pads, the ceramic ones have no time to heat up and braking power and distance are worst. And ceramic tend to be noisier. Only advantage is cleanliness.
Haven't had any of those problems with the Akebonos - maybe they're a less aggressive ceramic compound that doesn't need to heat up to brake effectively, and they certainly deal with heat from heavy braking much better than the stock Volvo pads.

In fact, my new car has ceramic pads on it from the factory. Stops just fine...cold, anyway. They're not great hot because the rotors are stupidly small.
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Post by xHeart »

jblackburn wrote:Akenbono's are a fantastic match for this car, but not a good match for the OEM rotors. You'll want something a little harder (Zimmerman was my choice).
jreed wrote:I used to use OEM front pads but was dissatisfied with all the dust they produced. I switched to Akebono pads (leaving the rotors as they were) about four years ago. They're great. Little or no dust, good braking power. Recommended!
Akebano on Zimmerman are steady and smooth, and quick if you want. I would service the calipers with cn90's write up, brake-lines per Jreed's at this age.
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Post by oragex »

jblackburn wrote:
oragex wrote:
instarx wrote:I won't pretend to have knowledge of all those pads, but I put Akebono ceramic pads and ATE rotors on mine and the combination has been great. No dust, no squealing and three years later they still stop smooth as butter. They were $65 for the front pads, $128 for the rotors including shipping. Shipping on rotors can get pricey - get them locally if you can.
I will never put again ceramic pads on a city/highway driven car. The only place for ceramic pads is on hill areas or at the track. In city, compared with semi-metallic pads, the ceramic ones have no time to heat up and braking power and distance are worst. And ceramic tend to be noisier. Only advantage is cleanliness.
Haven't had any of those problems with the Akebonos - maybe they're a less aggressive ceramic compound that doesn't need to heat up to brake effectively, and they certainly deal with heat from heavy braking much better than the stock Volvo pads.

In fact, my new car has ceramic pads on it from the factory. Stops just fine...cold, anyway. They're not great hot because the rotors are stupidly small.
It is certain that when heavy braking is involved, such as in a mountain area, ceramic brakes are almost a must to dissipate the heat. Perhaps like you say there are certain brands that work better on ceramics.

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