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MK3 Rear Brakes....anyone else going through brakes REALLY fast?


Anthony

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I have a 2014 Focus hatch. Just hit 31k miles and my rear brakes are squeaking and grinding. Ok, so 30k isn't that horrible to be replacing brakes...only problem is they were also replaced at 20k miles. (replaced at the dealer with Motorcraft brake pads)

 

I'm not paying hundreds to have Ford do this again, so I ordered my own brake pads and will be replacing them myself. I ordered these as they came recommended by other Focus owners.

 

Anyone else eat brakes (specifically rear disc brakes) like candy on the MK3 Focus?

Edited by Anthony
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Does the Focus have electronic rear brakes or is it hydraulic? I'd check myself but my wife isn't home and she has the new car. I've heard of gen 3 Fusions having this problem due to the electronic rear brakes malfunctioning.

 

And 30k is awful for brakes unless you do a lot of binary driving which I doubt you do. Should be able to get at least 50 out of them, likely more from the rear since there's less load put on them.

Edited by fuzzymoomoo
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Does the Focus have electronic rear brakes or is it hydraulic? I'd check myself but my wife isn't home and she has the new car. I've heard of gen 3 Fusions having this problem due to the electronic rear brakes malfunctioning.

 

And 30k is awful for brakes unless you do a lot of binary driving which I doubt you do. Should be able to get at least 50 out of them, likely more from the rear since there's less load put on them.

 

I only drive with one foot. :) . I do drive city-style driving a lot (a good number of stop signs)...but not a ridiculous amount. I've never had a car eat brakes so quickly. Especially rear brakes.

 

As for elec vs hydraulic, pretty sure they are hydraulic.

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There's also the possibility that the dealer may not have actually done the brake job back at 20k miles (through mistake or malice) and now the originals are finally wearing down.

 

I'd say that's an outlier of a case. But is there anyway of identifying if the brake pads are factory or not?

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There's also the possibility that the dealer may not have actually done the brake job back at 20k miles (through mistake or malice) and now the originals are finally wearing down.

 

I'd say that's an outlier of a case. But is there anyway of identifying if the brake pads are factory or not?

I don't think so. Factory ones may have the blue oval logo on them but I have no idea
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First generation Fusion would also go through rear brake pads VERY quickly.

My only advice is use PREMIUM ceramic brake pads. Wagner Thermo Quiet are good. Raybestos EHT1095H Enhanced Hybrid Technology include "retraction" springs.

I also recommend drilling the caliper slide pin hole oversized by 1/64" or 1/32" OR buy reman calipers WITH brackets and all hardware. Too much lube on the pins will actually cause a hydraulic lock that will result in brake drag. Make sure to clean all parts of the caliper where the pad touches until they are shiny and then apply lube.

Edited by theoldwizard
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First generation Fusion would also go through rear brake pads VERY quickly.

 

My only advice is use PREMIUM ceramic brake pads. Wagner Thermo Quiet are good. Raybestos EHT1095H Enhanced Hybrid Technology include "retraction" springs.

 

I also recommend drilling the caliper slide pin hole oversized by 1/64" or 1/32" OR buy reman calipers WITH brackets and all hardware. Too much lube on the pins will actually cause a hydraulic lock that will result in brake drag. Make sure to clean all parts of the caliper where the pad touches until they are shiny and then apply lube.

 

 

Yup, Wagner Thermo Quiet are the ones I ordered. Hopefully I get more than 10k out of them. :)

 

Thanks for the input.

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I usually give a pass the first time due to autocorrect, but if you use it twice then I have to assume it was intentional and then much sarcasm ensues......

 

The other one is "would of" instead of would've. Is it asking too much for an adult to be able to spell words learned in elementary/middle school?

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I usually give a pass the first time due to autocorrect, but if you use it twice then I have to assume it was intentional and then much sarcasm ensues......

 

The other one is "would of" instead of would've. Is it asking too much for an adult to be able to spell words learned in elementary/middle school?

.

Yes, you expect two much.... ;)

Edited by twintornados
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.

Since Pioneer is a automotive guy....maybe it was a "smart" phone trying to correct a perceived misspelled word?? I hope so....I smirk when I see the break vs brake thing....lol

Sorry. I would assume it was autocorrect since I know the difference and try to use the correct one. Just got a new phone because I dropped my old one and didn't realise it was set to automatically substitute words for what it thought I wanted.

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Well, I decided to bring the car to the dealership and let them take a look and see if they could find anything wrong with the brakes as to why they are wearing so fast in the rears before I changed the pads.

Nada. They couldn't find anything wrong (calipers working fine...etc...) They said it must be how I drive. All my previous cars (same commute) only got brakes every 30k-40k miles, so that kinda shoots that theory out the window.

They are putting new brakes on all around (I'll just save the Thermo-Quiets for next time). If this car needs brakes again in 9-10k miles I am really going to consider getting rid of it. Amongst the other issues I've already had since I bought it, I'm getting to know the service department a little too well at this point. It is a bummer because I like the car, but the issues are getting to be a bit much.

Edited by Anthony
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AdvanceTrac used to drastically increase the wear on the rear brakes due to its use of differential braking to control yaw and perform traction control functions, but I think that was mostly on the RWD/AWD vehicles--I know my LS went through rear brakes faster than any other 4-wheel disc vehicle I've driven (and I've put lots of miles on several), but I don't think they went faster than the fronts. Your Focus isn't AWD is it?

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