Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 15

Thread: Passat Brake issue - Help

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Country NSW/Southern Tablelands
    Posts
    80

    Passat Brake issue - Help

    Hi Guys, I have a brake problem with my 07 V6 Passat that the forum may be able to solve. So far my local dealer and VW Aust are at a loss to explain what has happened.

    I recently had the rear brakes inspected as there was scraping noise coming from the left rear during braking. On inspection it was revealed that the inside brake pad of the rear left had worn down to nothing, the scraping noise was metal on metal as the brake was applied. An inspection of the other rear inside pad revealed the same thing.

    The car had only recently had its 60,000km service with the brake pads then showing 7mm on the front and 5mm on the rear at that service. However, it transpired those figures were for the outside pad. It appears inside pads are not (or weren't) inspected. $600 later through new rear disks and pads no one has an answer as to why the inside pads wore away to nothing. As there is currently no answer there is no fix, meaning this will probably happen again.

    Has anyone heard of this or have an idea what the dealership should be looking at or doing?? Happy to answer any questions you have.

    Thanks in advance.
    Man In Black (MIB)
    2007 V6 4Motion Passat, Black, Leather, DSG, 18" Wheels, Bi-xenons
    2010 Mk 6 Golf R, 5-dr, Rising Blue, DSG, leather, ACC, RVC

  2. #2
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Moorooka, Qld
    Posts
    32
    Well, that's freaking me out!

    I've got an '05 which it around the 60k kms now....

    Could it be that the caliper isn't sliding in properly? The cylinder is mounted on the inside, so that's going to be the cause.... But I've no idea what the failure method/mode would be.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Melbourne
    Posts
    971
    Quite a few late model dubs wear the rear pads faster than the fronts, and quite a few don't last 60,000k. Pads and rotors are both sacrificial, and rotors can rarely be machined and reused.

    Is it possible that there is a bad pad material batch affecting the inside pads only, or as mentioned above the sliders are not free enough causing all the work to be done by the inside pads beside the piston.


    2008 Blue Graphite GTI DSG with Latte leather. SOLD 4/9/2024

    2023 T-ROC R - Sunroof, Black Pack, Beats Audio

  4. #4
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    Melbourne, Mexico
    Posts
    8,979
    Users Country Flag
    Quote Originally Posted by gerhard View Post
    Is it possible that there is a bad pad material batch affecting the inside pads only, or as mentioned above the sliders are not free enough causing all the work to be done by the inside pads beside the piston.
    The 4 pads on the back are the same shape so I don't think there is a material issue. Could be a problem with the caliper alignment for some reason?

    Gavin

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Dont poke and hope, scan, smoke and scope
    Posts
    4,423
    Users Country Flag
    Quote Originally Posted by Man In Black (MIB) View Post
    Hi Guys, I have a brake problem with my 07 V6 Passat that the forum may be able to solve. So far my local dealer and VW Aust are at a loss to explain what has happened.

    I recently had the rear brakes inspected as there was scraping noise coming from the left rear during braking. On inspection it was revealed that the inside brake pad of the rear left had worn down to nothing, the scraping noise was metal on metal as the brake was applied. An inspection of the other rear inside pad revealed the same thing.

    The car had only recently had its 60,000km service with the brake pads then showing 7mm on the front and 5mm on the rear at that service. However, it transpired those figures were for the outside pad. It appears inside pads are not (or weren't) inspected. $600 later through new rear disks and pads no one has an answer as to why the inside pads wore away to nothing. As there is currently no answer there is no fix, meaning this will probably happen again.

    Has anyone heard of this or have an idea what the dealership should be looking at or doing?? Happy to answer any questions you have.

    Thanks in advance.
    Did you get to see the pads they took from your car mate????? Inside pads will wear a bit more than the outers as they are closest to the pistons. Other one dare i say it they never checked them????? At 6ok if you havent had brakes they would be well overdue. The rears wear down quicker than the fronts on new Passats, Mk5 Golfs. The rear applies momentarily before the fronts .
    Keen to hear more
    Jmac
    Alba European
    Service, Diagnostics and repairs. Mobile Diag available on request
    Audi/VW/Porsche Factory trained tech 25+ yrs exp
    For people who value experience call 0423965341

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Location
    Highlands NSW
    Posts
    302
    Quote Originally Posted by Jmac View Post
    Other one dare i say it they never checked them?????
    Jmac
    My guess too. If the inside pads were OK at the 60,000 km service they would have hardly been likely to have worn down in such a hurry.

    I would be having stern words with the dealer and looking for some type of compensation, especially as it was on BOTH sides, so it looks like things were operating somewhat normally.

    Especially if it was serviced by an authorised VW service agent/dealer.

    Can any of our dealer or service members confirm that both inner and outer pads should be inspected, especially if the remaining pad thickness is reported with the service.

    We rely on the service report as a trigger for pad replacement.
    You know you are getting old when you cancel your order for a 3.6 CC and buy an Icelandic Gray TDI CC instead.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Melbourne
    Posts
    971
    Quote Originally Posted by Highlander View Post
    My guess too. If the inside pads were OK at the 60,000 km service they would have hardly been likely to have worn down in such a hurry.

    I would be having stern words with the dealer and looking for some type of compensation, especially as it was on BOTH sides, so it looks like things were operating somewhat normally.

    Especially if it was serviced by an authorised VW service agent/dealer.

    Can any of our dealer or service members confirm that both inner and outer pads should be inspected, especially if the remaining pad thickness is reported with the service.

    We rely on the service report as a trigger for pad replacement.
    Why would compensation come into it.

    If the pads and rotors are worn, they would need replacing anyway. As it happens, OP has got maximum life from the set. Changing them earlier would have cost exactly the same.


    2008 Blue Graphite GTI DSG with Latte leather. SOLD 4/9/2024

    2023 T-ROC R - Sunroof, Black Pack, Beats Audio

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Location
    Highlands NSW
    Posts
    302

    Why Not?

    Quote Originally Posted by gerhard View Post
    Why would compensation come into it.

    If the pads and rotors are worn, they would need replacing anyway. As it happens, OP has got maximum life from the set. Changing them earlier would have cost exactly the same.
    Pads yes but rotors, maybe, mabe not.

    If I had my car serviced and received a report that the rears had 7mm of pads left, I would expect that I had considerable kilometres left in the pads,

    At the least I would expect a call from by service guys saying that your reads are good only for another 1000kms or so before they need replacement.

    I have generally received a note on the service report as to estimate of remaining pad life and a comment like " Pads will need replacement at next service or a call to say that pads won't make it to the next service and is it OK to replace them.

    Pads replaced in time before metal to metal may have not involved replacement of rotors and parts and labour costs involved. Or do we expect to replace a set of rotors per set of pads.

    Do we expect to have to replace rotors at 60,000km? Yes or No. Has this been the experience of other Passat owners?

    Maybe the rear inner pad wear is something we need to be aware of and bring to the notice of the VW service guys at time of service. Far be it from me to think that members of this forum could know more than the VW service workshops.

    But by way of example

    VW service wanted to charge me when they firstly offered to upgrade my RNS510 firmware under warranty to accept 32 GB SDHC cards and then told me it couldn't be done as my RNS was revision B and the only way to get SDHC compatibility was to buy a later Revision C RNS510.

    I left unhappy, downloaded the firmware from the links on Maverick's gti.com site and installed the firmware myself and it works perfectly. All without buying a Revision C RNS510.

    Thanks Maverick and this site for the info. Only wish I had been here before wasting $900 on a basic Nokia/VW Bluetooth phone kit which I feel is so poor that it is of merchantable quality. Even the basic $400 overpriced Nokia/Holden bluetooth phone hit allows for voice dialling but that's another day for another thread.

    I still think it could look like an "oversight" during the service.
    You know you are getting old when you cancel your order for a 3.6 CC and buy an Icelandic Gray TDI CC instead.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Country NSW/Southern Tablelands
    Posts
    80
    Thread Starter
    Thanks Guys. I think we may have cracked it. "Inside pads wear faster" and "late models Passats have the rears go first". It almost sounds like it is by design so as to ensure you don't lose your fronts by making you change the backs first as an indicator of overall wear. After a proper re-inspection they said the fronts will need replacing in about 7-10,000kms time.

    At the 60,000km service the dealership did not check the inside pads which is why they wore away to nothing and was metal on metal when I did something about it.

    I'll ensure they give me 8 measurements for disk pad wear each time now. Particularly as my Mk-5 GTI is up for its 60,000km service shortly.

    Thanks again.
    Man In Black (MIB)
    2007 V6 4Motion Passat, Black, Leather, DSG, 18" Wheels, Bi-xenons
    2010 Mk 6 Golf R, 5-dr, Rising Blue, DSG, leather, ACC, RVC

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Location
    Highlands NSW
    Posts
    302

    Quote Originally Posted by Man In Black (MIB) View Post

    At the 60,000km service the dealership did not check the inside pads which is why they wore away to nothing and was metal on metal when I did something about it..
    I would be interested to know if there is a tick on the service report or similar that says "rear brakes checked". if it's "usual" or "normal" for the inside pads to wear faster, one would think that it would be imperative that you check the INSIDE pad wear.

    Or am I just being picky. Steering alignment box on my CC predelivery sheet was ticked OK and I drove it straight to my wheel aligners who found it far enough out to need adjustment. Dealer shrugged his shoulders when I told him.

    Not confined to VW I must admit. My new VZ Holden ute had a tick in the box saying "tub liner installed and checked for fit". Opened the hard cover. Guess What?. No tub liner. It was a dealer fit accessory in the VZs. Strenuous work checking those predelivery boxes and not cheap either.
    You know you are getting old when you cancel your order for a 3.6 CC and buy an Icelandic Gray TDI CC instead.

Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
| |