Dreaded Brake Dust
The approach of preventing as much of the black dusting from getting on the wheel in the first place (which some state actually causes corrosive damage to wheels) is preferred over finding ways to simply clean the dusting off easier thereafter. At least the Michelin product attempts to do this.
There have been countless threads on this topic with interesting reviews.
For those whom are not yet aware of the Porterfield option:
www.myroadster.net
Do you know if the Porterfield ones are of a new design? I would love to try this idea again, but I'm afraid of ruining my rotors.
As for wax, Cadet, I am a strong believer in "Wax everything"..
As soon as I got the car, a had no less than 3 layers (with 24 hour rest period) of Wolfgang synthetic polymer wax applied to the entire car, rims, glass, chrome, all but the rubber. I then will follow up with a coat evey month. In past cars, and in my present Volvo I even applied it to the wood trim on the inside, however the MB manual specifically says not to do this, so I will refrain in the case of the MB. However, this technique as kept every car I've owned/leased in mint condition (exterior wise) over as long as 5 years.
The Michelin spray went over my wax, and for all I know it may have inhibited it's chemical process, but I wasn't about to forego my wax on the wheels in the hopes that this stuff would work well.
Last edited by Sam Samaha; Jun 20, 2005 at 05:19 PM.
I can tell you that from my own reviewing of the comments from numerous Porterfield users in this MB forum (and others) that I have yet to witness a single complaint or a single user that would not opt for these pads over and over again. If these pads contributed to prematurely "ruining rotors" or were a factor in any real drawback, these things would be well known and would thus be evident in these forums.
Hope this helps.
Last edited by c2jones; Jun 20, 2005 at 07:17 PM.
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