Shimanxo SLX m7120 brakes not working on new bike.. advice please

matt43

New Member
Feb 11, 2025
2
0
Orlando
Bought a new shuttle am with SLX 7120 4-piston brakes and they are horrible. My other bike is a specialized turbo levo with sram RS brakes. The RSs are true 1-finger power.. I can do endos with 1-finger all day long. The SLX brakes require an incredible amount of force to lock the front wheel (at least 2-fingers). Also, my SLX brakes have pad slop. Stand next to the bike and rock it back and forth with brake locked and the pads clunk as you rock it. These things feel like junk.. I thought Shimano brakes are superior to sram? I bought new pads, roughed the rotors and cleaned with brake cleaner. .. better but same problems. Only thing I love about shimano is they are quiet.. my srams moan.

Full disclosure.. my RSC's have 220mm rotor on front vs SLX with 200mm rotor.
 

timo2824

Active member
Dec 27, 2023
78
105
USA
If you're using the metal pads it takes quite a bit of heat to seat them in. Like, find a hill and be ready to make 20 runs to get them hot. I'm running the XT's and they have that big honking heat sink on them, I was really surprised how long it took them to get hot. I've had 3 different avid brakes fail on me, one on a downhill run that resulted in a cartwheel over a berm in the Santa Monica mountains, rental bike. My wife's avids locked up, I'm assuming from seal swell. My old specialized camber pro I had them fail on me, luckily back in Kansas so the hills weren't too bad. Tektro and Shimano brakes haven't failed on me so far, so I'll take a pad that's sucks to seat.
 

matt43

New Member
Feb 11, 2025
2
0
Orlando
If you're using the metal pads it takes quite a bit of heat to seat them in. Like, find a hill and be ready to make 20 runs to get them hot. I'm running the XT's and they have that big honking heat sink on them, I was really surprised how long it took them to get hot. I've had 3 different avid brakes fail on me, one on a downhill run that resulted in a cartwheel over a berm in the Santa Monica mountains, rental bike. My wife's avids locked up, I'm assuming from seal swell. My old specialized camber pro I had them fail on me, luckily back in Kansas so the hills weren't too bad. Tektro and Shimano brakes haven't failed on me so far, so I'll take a pad that's sucks to seat.
Yes i am using the metal pads. You might be right because the caliper never got really hot. No hills here in Florida but i will work on it tomorrow and report back. I do love how smooth and quiet they are. Thank you for responding.
 

levity

E*POWAH Elite
Patreon
Founding Member
Feb 15, 2018
533
1,581
SoCal
I’ve used SLX 7120 brakes on several bikes, though usually with resin pads. They provide strong stopping power - one finger nose wheelies and rear tire skids - all with good modulation. As @matt43 said you probably just need to bed them in properly with a series of controlled high speed stops. Alloy rotor surfaces help a lot.
 

HandsomeDanNZ

Well-known member
Subscriber
Jun 16, 2024
195
375
Auckland NZ
After breaking them in, my SLX with sintered pads are the best 4 piston brakes I’ve ever used. Stopping power is excellent and I’m a heavy dude on a heavy bike.
 

irie

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Subscriber
May 2, 2022
3,074
3,179
Chichester, W.Sussex, UK
Yes i am using the metal pads. You might be right because the caliper never got really hot. No hills here in Florida but i will work on it tomorrow and report back. I do love how smooth and quiet they are. Thank you for responding.
Where you are there is no reason to use metal/sintered pads. Instead use Shimano D03S resin pads which are very quiet and grip instantly. Before use clean any previous pad deposits off the rotors.
 

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