2013 ML 350 (CHECK BREAK PAD)




One way to confirm is to remove one of the front wheel and check the pads.
As for buying parts, I'd recommend the following -
autohausaz.com
RMeuropean.com
Thanks, some were telling me that for mercedes you have to change the rotor when changing the pads. Is that true or can I just change the pads??
You may not need to replace rotors on every time you change pads just because you are changing pads; may be every other time you change the pads. Again, this will depend on what I said above 2 conditions.
Only way to confirm any/all of this is by removing wheels and checking.
Last edited by pcy; Nov 14, 2016 at 02:10 PM.
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I've never owned Cadillac cars, so, I'll take your word for it.
Only way to be sure is to remove one wheel from each axle and check.
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I had a 2007 XK Jaguar (miss that car) and the first thing I noticed about the brakes, was there was a definite rearwards bias when coming to a stop. Quite the opposite of other cars I've owned where there was a noticable nose dive when braking. Times have changed.
I also wonder if Distronic, when holding a given speed going downhill, uses the rear brakes to slow the vehicle down to keep the given speed. Anybody know?




Didn't do rotors this time, they are in limits.
New tools, + parts 170$ and hour and a half of work. Make sure you get a caliper piston tool, 6$ at Amazon worked just fine to push the piston back.
Parts I bought from
http://www.mboemparts.com/auto-parts?mobile=1
Pads and one sensor.
There is a trick to put electric brakes into service mode. I was following this guy
Good luck.




There is no rear brake bias on any MB vehicle (or for that matter any vehicle with properly functioning brakes - see http://stoptech.com/technical-suppor...alance-matters for a proper explanation why if you're so inclined). Furthermore, the brakes are designed so that they both provide the required amount of force on each axle and thus wear out at approximately the same rate. If either the fronts or rears wear out while the other axle has lots of brake material left, something is likely unbalanced or wrong with the car.
The Infiniti models mentioned by pjw has undersized brakes for the weight of the car and did wear out very quickly, but on both axles at the same rate. If you had different pads, rotors or even tires on one axle from the other then yes, one end would have more grip then the other and the brakes would wear out accordingly.
As to the OP's question - 40K miles for a set of brakes on a 5,500+ lb truck is well within the normal range. You can either replace them yourself or have a service shop / dealer do it - including installation it shoud run you about $1.5K - $2K if you need both pads and rotors on both axles. For the W166 ML, the OEM MB rotors and pads are only marginally more expensive than aftermarket, but they are well made and the rotors won't warp or wear out prematurely like they do with half of the cheaper options.


