Good price with pads although the pic shows vented - aren't they solid on the rear of a D2? They are on RRC, D1, P38A, and L322, et al?
I am after a pair of rear rotors for my D2. I was wondering if anyone has had, or knows someone who has, experience with this brand.
S fits LANDROVER Discovery II V8 Petrol TD5 Diesel 99-04 REAR Disc Rotors & PADS
Also anyone have different brands that you are very happy with post it here.
Although the one in the link comes with pads, quality of the pads doesn't matter has I have a set of EBC yellow ready to fit with new rotors.
Dave.
I was asked " Is it ignorance or apathy?" I replied "I don't know and I don't care."
1983 RR gone (wish I kept it)
1996 TDI ES.
2003 TD5 HSE
1987 Isuzu County
Good price with pads although the pic shows vented - aren't they solid on the rear of a D2? They are on RRC, D1, P38A, and L322, et al?
Ron B.
VK2OTC
2003 L322 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Auto
2007 Yamaha XJR1300
Previous: 1983, 1986 RRC; 1995, 1996 P38A; 1995 Disco1; 1984 V8 County 110; Series IIA
RIP Bucko - Riding on Forever
Correct Ron. But the pic is for illustration purpose.
If you look in the description where the big red arrow is, it lists front and back, with the arrow pointing to rear where it says solid.
Dave.
I was asked " Is it ignorance or apathy?" I replied "I don't know and I don't care."
1983 RR gone (wish I kept it)
1996 TDI ES.
2003 TD5 HSE
1987 Isuzu County
Why risk unknown quality / unknown brand on brake
You cant do much better than DBA rotor for quality and price. DBA093 is what you want , you can get them anywhere and would be between $175 - $200
don't waste your money on slotted,
I only buy DBA.
If you don't like trucks, stop buying stuff.
I use DBA, the D2 has had the same rotors for 15 years.
The D4 is at 12 years.
Both still well above minimum, never machined.
D4 is on same Akebono pads I installed at 25,000km - now at 194,000
Spend a bit more and you get performance and value
Thanks. I have always thought that slotted was a bit of overkill. However, a while back I was reading a thread on D2 brakes and Slunnie had a lot of input.
He reckoned that there was substantial improvement in his brakes when he fitted EBC yellow pads with slotted discs.
So I thought I would try the same. I have sourced the pads and naturally went looking for slotted discs.
I think I will go with your advice and use plain ones. I do know a lot of people on this forum complain that D2 brakes aren't the greatest, but I have always found them to be satisfactory.
Dave.
I was asked " Is it ignorance or apathy?" I replied "I don't know and I don't care."
1983 RR gone (wish I kept it)
1996 TDI ES.
2003 TD5 HSE
1987 Isuzu County
I converted my Iveco from rear drums to discs from a F250 & tried EBC Yellowstuff pads. The problem with them is they dont start really working until they are hot, and they never had a chance to get hot with the big ford vented rotors, as my rear calipers are also the handbrake the yellowstuff did not grip so well when cold. I switched to budget rear pads & much better , they dont get hot just stop better.
but probably different result with solid rears especially in mountain downhill towing where they might get hot
Slotted is only going to be of benefit on a racetrack.
Slotted is a significant benefit for a 4wd…. Very much so.
Cross drilled is not, it’s a waste.
Slotted:
- less glazing
- better pad bite
- shed water faster after a crossing
- shed mud
- rocks (small) that get caught up are ejected
Nothing but upsides on every vehicle upgraded to slotted (T2 is more than adequate). All perform better all the time in all conditions.
My lad switched out the T2s on his D2 trying to find a vibration and fitted std discs. The difference was notable, with performance reduced.
If you tow or do water crossings slotted is remarkable.
Wouldn’t use EBC anything though for pads - all experiences were significantly worse than Slunnie.
Racetracks are Cross drill/slotted territory - my track car was ceramic rotors![]()
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