Replacing (or not) brake wear sensors
Discussion
What type of sensor have you got?
I'm curious as the ones I've seen on our own cars are basically a loop of insulated electrical wire in a little plastic plug pushed into a hole in the pad.
As the pad wears thin the wire insulation wears through & the bare wire can make contact with the disc thereby putting the warning light on.
Whilst I could re-use any that still have the insulation intact I just use the new ones that come with the new pads.
I'm curious as the ones I've seen on our own cars are basically a loop of insulated electrical wire in a little plastic plug pushed into a hole in the pad.
As the pad wears thin the wire insulation wears through & the bare wire can make contact with the disc thereby putting the warning light on.
Whilst I could re-use any that still have the insulation intact I just use the new ones that come with the new pads.
Its false economy not to replace the wear sensors in my experience. The chance of the fiddly little things breaking their circuit whilst you are trying to remove them and refit them, plus expecting them to last as long as another set of pads when they've already done a duty cycle - the odds are not in your favour. They are relatively so cheap why would you not replace them.
Pretty sure the last time i replaced pads on my old MB it came with new sensor leads, if not they're cheap enough to buy but if you remove them carefully should last a couple of pads out.
If its those spring clip types that scrape on the disc when pads are worn enough, they've always been supplied with new pads in my experience.
If its those spring clip types that scrape on the disc when pads are worn enough, they've always been supplied with new pads in my experience.
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