Brake pads OEM Honda or OEM Volkswagen
Make certain your kiddo has GOOD brakes and tires.
These new ceremic pads can last pretty long. My Honda has almost 70k miles and still plenty pads left.
Well, the brake pads aren't stock - I've replaced them a few times.
I can vouch for the polo. It\u2019s been 5 years and some modifications. Other than brake pads and tyres it runs as good as it did the day I got it(actually better, because of the mods.)
I never had an Audi but I have a 2009 VW Jetta that's still running, it's my grocery getter. The breaks have lasted since 2012 as insane as that is, there's still a 3/4th of carbon on the pads. I changed the oil all the time, grew up with a car dad. But if VW's are anything like Audi's just maintain it and it'll run for the next decade.
The only other good thing from this visit is that they measured the brake pad thickness which confirmed that I need to replace the pads soon. We are currently at 59k and the rears are in the red at 3mm while the front was at 5mm.
First set lasted 70k, the second set 50k as I was cheap and did the pad slap.
I have 4,800 miles on a 2023 MK8 and my brake pads are sticking to the rotors.
I’m not a mechanic by any means (I do try to work on my car myself for what I can fix and know how to do) but I’m gonna throw my own car under the bus and say VW. Why tf do I need specialized tools, and why do barely any after market parts fit my car?
The Atlas oem pads sound like dying squealing pigs well after break in, only fix is to install aftermarket pads
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