Is anyone suffering excessive wear in their rear pads and discs?
My bike has a Sram Level T, 2 pot rear calliper on 200mm Sram discs, and in 1300 miles has gone through 6 sets of pads and a disc. The front is the same disc with a 4 pot calliper, and is about half worn on the original set of pads.
The rear disc is badly worn, so much so, that even new pads and the lever on full adjustment can't take up the slack, and also I noted that the pads are nowhere near in line with the wearing part of the disc, leaving several mm on the outer edge untouched, and part of the spokes are worn away. This is as it left the factory.
So, I fitted a brand new genuine Sram 203mm disc, and genuine pads, and shimmed out the calliper so as the pads contact the correct part of the disc, which set the lever right out from the bar. 50 miles later, and the lever can be pulled in and touch the bar.
On some steep down hills, I could feel the lever slowly pulling in as the pads wore away.... Discuss!
My bike has a Sram Level T, 2 pot rear calliper on 200mm Sram discs, and in 1300 miles has gone through 6 sets of pads and a disc. The front is the same disc with a 4 pot calliper, and is about half worn on the original set of pads.
The rear disc is badly worn, so much so, that even new pads and the lever on full adjustment can't take up the slack, and also I noted that the pads are nowhere near in line with the wearing part of the disc, leaving several mm on the outer edge untouched, and part of the spokes are worn away. This is as it left the factory.
So, I fitted a brand new genuine Sram 203mm disc, and genuine pads, and shimmed out the calliper so as the pads contact the correct part of the disc, which set the lever right out from the bar. 50 miles later, and the lever can be pulled in and touch the bar.
On some steep down hills, I could feel the lever slowly pulling in as the pads wore away.... Discuss!