Front Brake Job
i'm figuring they're telling me this so they can prevent replacing parts for free under warranty and put some liability on me, although i'm convinced there's absolutely nothing wrong with the brakes; unless i go to another dealer i pretty much have to do the brakes if i go back to this one and tell them to chase down the other noises.
i called an indy and they quoted about $300 in parts and 1hr in labor at $120, plus tax, etc. they come out around $475.
looking through youtube videos and it seems like it's straight forward, pricing out my own parts i get about $330 so now i'm thinking that for $150 it may be worth it for me to pay someone to do the job instead of me trying to do this on a side of a street with a spare tire kit by myself.
what are your thoughts on the pricing and the situation in general? should i go to another mb dealer and have them evaluate the car?
Thanks
i'm figuring they're telling me this so they can prevent replacing parts for free under warranty and put some liability on me, although i'm convinced there's absolutely nothing wrong with the brakes; unless i go to another dealer i pretty much have to do the brakes if i go back to this one and tell them to chase down the other noises.
i called an indy and they quoted about $300 in parts and 1hr in labor at $120, plus tax, etc. they come out around $475.
looking through youtube videos and it seems like it's straight forward, pricing out my own parts i get about $330 so now i'm thinking that for $150 it may be worth it for me to pay someone to do the job instead of me trying to do this on a side of a street with a spare tire kit by myself.
what are your thoughts on the pricing and the situation in general? should i go to another mb dealer and have them evaluate the car?
Thanks
but if you got an 1hr-2hr of free time you can save yourself hella money. easy and straight forward.




but before you do anything, can you please elaborate more on the problem?
also, +1 on the video if you have.
the "chirp" is a high pitch sound that only happens when i go over a high impulse thing -- a massive pothole won't do it, neither will a speed hump/bump, but a 2-inch divide in the road (like on a bridge) it'll happen, or on rail road tracks, or small cracks/pot holes.
usually i hear this when doing 20-25mph, going slower it doesn't happen, thus why i said on a high impulse impact.
it seems to have been coming from the front, it took me forever driving around with a tech (the roads by the dealership are much nicer than where i live) to reproduce the sound, then it took them a day to find it on their own and finally "after multiple phonecalls with MB" they narrowed it down to the front left shock.
they also said they think some of the noise is coming from the rotor rust -- i'll have to take a picture of this, but essentially on the perimeter of the rotor there is rust, the rotor is somewhat worn (i can feel the pad groove in it) so i don't think the pad ever even touches the rust part of the rotor, as it's only on the perimeter.
either way it's frustrating because i can hear the chirp still coming from the right side, but they were pretty firm that they found the noises and all remains is brakes. that's why my options are to 1)do brakes and go back to the same dealer or maybe 2) go to a new dealer and have them look at the chirp issue.
and yes, i don't have all the tools and thought about buying them, but the way my parts came out honestly for $150 extra it seems like i can save myself a lot of trouble and just pay the indy. but again, i also don't want to just replace brakes/rotors if i i don't need to, thus maybe i should go to a second dealer first?
not my image but here's the rust that i'm talking about. Also, the rust on my rotors does not wrap around on the brake surface at all like it does in this picture, i only wanted to show what i mean by saying "perimeter rust"

Last edited by iridium7777; Oct 11, 2016 at 11:49 AM.
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dealer cost: $780 total
indy cost: $300 parts, $120 labor + tax = ~$480total
my cost: $300 parts, $XXX tools = ~$400 total?
but before you do anything, can you please elaborate more on the problem?
also, +1 on the video if you have.
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the "chirp" is a high pitch sound that only happens when i go over a high impulse thing -- a massive pothole won't do it, neither will a speed hump/bump, but a 2-inch divide in the road (like on a bridge) it'll happen, or on rail road tracks, or small cracks/pot holes.
usually i hear this when doing 20-25mph, going slower it doesn't happen, thus why i said on a high impulse impact.
it seems to have been coming from the front, it took me forever driving around with a tech (the roads by the dealership are much nicer than where i live) to reproduce the sound, then it took them a day to find it on their own and finally "after multiple phonecalls with MB" they narrowed it down to the front left shock.
they also said they think some of the noise is coming from the rotor rust -- i'll have to take a picture of this, but essentially on the perimeter of the rotor there is rust, the rotor is somewhat worn (i can feel the pad groove in it) so i don't think the pad ever even touches the rust part of the rotor, as it's only on the perimeter.
either way it's frustrating because i can hear the chirp still coming from the right side, but they were pretty firm that they found the noises and all remains is brakes. that's why my options are to 1)do brakes and go back to the same dealer or maybe 2) go to a new dealer and have them look at the chirp issue.
and yes, i don't have all the tools and thought about buying them, but the way my parts came out honestly for $150 extra it seems like i can save myself a lot of trouble and just pay the indy. but again, i also don't want to just replace brakes/rotors if i i don't need to, thus maybe i should go to a second dealer first?
not my image but here's the rust that i'm talking about. Also, the rust on my rotors does not wrap around on the brake surface at all like it does in this picture, i only wanted to show what i mean by saying "perimeter rust"

definitely need to change them out asap
You may want to download the 46mb video
https://app.box.com/s/ovp1l3nn690yt92vvvek8ozfa2kf963b




However, I don't see how that is the cause of your chirp given when you hear it. And about that chirp, I downloaded the video and cranked up the volume and couldn't hear anything other than the rough roads. Sorry.

Your car has 45K miles. Have you ever done any brake work to it?
I downloaded your vid, cranked up the noise and still could not hear any chirps.
The drilled rotor picture shows an accumulation of dirt and grime. If the rotor is within thickness, take off and clean. However, at MB shop[s the labor rates would make this cost prohibitive to you and most likely cheaper to toss them and put shiny new ones on.
However, by all means, go with the Indy shop on brakes and save some $$$.
Show us the thickness of your pads.
My best guess is at 45K miles your pads are worn and the chirping you are hearing is related to the "critical" noise of the rotor being vibrated harmonically at just the right "frequency" and it chirps.
Pads and rotors and your noise will be gone. However, don't get hosed go to an Indy

@liam -- i don't think changing the brakes will solve any sort of chirping noise, the rotor is still plenty thick and i can't imagine that it would vibrate upon hitting a bump, but who knows. i'm not expecting it to solve anything but give me more proof on trying to get the dealer to chase down the other issues.
At about 70,000 miles (or a big pothole) there are a couple of bushings I might suspect.
It is not the brake rotors, but they look like freshening them up certainly wouldn't hurt the car any.
At about 70,000 miles (or a big pothole) there are a couple of bushings I might suspect.
It is not the brake rotors, but they look like freshening them up certainly wouldn't hurt the car any.
my car has 45k miles not 70. i replaced the rotors and pads yesterday but it's too cold to drive around with the windows down and listen to chirps now so i may have to wait until late spring.
With R1 Concepts' (a forum sponsor) upgraded front drilled rotors and pads, new wear sensors and rotor retaining screws I'm in around $440 in parts and supplies. Watching a couple of YT videos was helpful, and having a floor rack, wheel chocks, and jack stands made it possible. There were only two difficult bolts - the caliper mount bolts were really tight, and the angles you need to get in with make it tough to apply the right leverage/force. Next time I'll fit a pipe on my ratchet for a breaker-bar like torque that fits where I need.
The outcome was perfect - new rotors with low dust, quiet pads and better braking than I've had on the car.
-Adam
With R1 Concepts' (a forum sponsor) upgraded front drilled rotors and pads, new wear sensors and rotor retaining screws I'm in around $440 in parts and supplies. Watching a couple of YT videos was helpful, and having a floor rack, wheel chocks, and jack stands made it possible. There were only two difficult bolts - the caliper mount bolts were really tight, and the angles you need to get in with make it tough to apply the right leverage/force. Next time I'll fit a pipe on my ratchet for a breaker-bar like torque that fits where I need.
The outcome was perfect - new rotors with low dust, quiet pads and better braking than I've had on the car.
-Adam





