My goto upgrade pad is Hawk HPS. I would think a Stoptech product is a solid choice too but I have no experience with them.
Squealing from the wear indicators scraping the rotors? If there's enough friction material left, try applying very thin layers of high temperature grease behind the pads and on their shims. Pads selling for $10-$30 a set are fine for your car.
Replaced the wife's 2007 Jetta with Hawk HPS (rear) and performance ceramic (front) ~ 5 years ago and they are still going strong.
You may already know (if you have replaced brakes before on your VW) but I believe your year also has rear brakes that require twisting when compressing/de-compressing the piston. You need a special VW tool for this. Found out the hard way when we did the job, but was able to cheaply rent a brake changing kit from Advanced Auto for an hour to do the job. Worked great. Without the right tool, you can damage the piston if you don't do it correctly. Just a heads-up.![]()
I will need the special piston compressor for the rears. Thanks everyone for all the feedback!
I will need the special piston compressor for the rears. Thanks everyone for all the feedback!
Higher "initial bite" means the pad is optimized for colder temperatures and will perform worse than stock under any kind of sustained use (which is precisely the time you most need it to perform well). True high-performance pads generally have significantly less "initial bite."
Hawk HPS is a great example of this. Downright dangerous pads for anything beyond the first stop.
For a regular Jetta, get the OEM pads and call it a day. Most OEMs actually do a pretty good job of selecting compounds that work "well enough" across a range of temperatures.
That's a bit hyperbolic don't ya think?Downright dangerous pads for anything beyond the first stop.
Must have been dust\dirt, because after a lot of rain and a wash the squealing is nearly gone. I was looking at "performance" pads for better initial bite. I've never liked the factory pads. I'm going to get some brake lube and hit the back of the pads to try to take care of the rest of the noise.