AMG Carbon Ceramic Brakes Complete Set
For SaleBrakes
-
Price
$9,999• OBO
- Location Westlake Village, CA, 91362, USA
- Condition Used
- Compatibility
| Make | Model | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Mercedes-Benz | Any Model | 2016 - 2025 |
Description:
Selling a complete set of Carbon Ceramic Brakes in great condition. Priced to sell these go for much more even used.
Taken off a 2020 E63 AMG with roughly 28k miles. Rotors are very clean, pads also have quite a bit of life on them.
Double check please but these will fit the following:
18-23 E63
16-20 C190 AMG GT
18-present X290 GT63
Might fit a few others but please verify.
GLC63 and C63 will fit as well but needs a wheel spacer in rear. This conversion has been done before and documented.
Priced at $9999 OBO shipped via UPS to 48 states. Add shipping for anywhere else. Send a PM for more details.
Judson
Can you please also provide the part numbers?
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The best and, in my opinion only, other way to measure the CCB rotor "wear" (chemical degradation from heat) is to use the Carboteq tool. I wrote the attached paper to explain why I think this is so.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
The best and, in my opinion only, other way to measure the CCB rotor "wear" (chemical degradation from heat) is to use the Carboteq tool. I wrote the attached paper to explain why I think this is so.
Audi specifies that their dealers must use it for evaluating CCBs, but I don't know whether they conform. The more recent (5+ years, at least) German cars are using the (Brembo, I think) marked CCB rotors that can be evaluated using the (very expensive) Carboteq tool.
For reference, I've done 16 track days with my GTR Pro, nearly all of them on short tracks that are very hard on brakes because there are so many braking zones without long-run sections to cool. I take Carboteq readings after each track day and none of the readings are down to half-way between the upper/lower numbers marked for each of the 3 reading points on the rotors.
A couple of years ago, my extensive searching found anecdotal evidence that CCBs may last 40-50 track days, but no-one had published any real data. If the wear-number degradation is linear, then my measurements would seem to indicate that that is likely the case. If the wear (heat-caused chemical degradation) goes exponential, at some point, then that won't be the case. Time will tell (assuming this Ol' Fart can continue doing track days).
For street-only use, unless you're a dangerous maniac that's trying to be hard on brakes, it appears that CCB rotors could last the life of the vehicle ... or at least long past the failure point of many other major parts.
Audi specifies that their dealers must use it for evaluating CCBs, but I don't know whether they conform. The more recent (5+ years, at least) German cars are using the (Brembo, I think) marked CCB rotors that can be evaluated using the (very expensive) Carboteq tool.
For reference, I've done 16 track days with my GTR Pro, nearly all of them on short tracks that are very hard on brakes because there are so many braking zones without long-run sections to cool. I take Carboteq readings after each track day and none of the readings are down to half-way between the upper/lower numbers marked for each of the 3 reading points on the rotors.
A couple of years ago, my extensive searching found anecdotal evidence that CCBs may last 40-50 track days, but no-one had published any real data. If the wear-number degradation is linear, then my measurements would seem to indicate that that is likely the case. If the wear (heat-caused chemical degradation) goes exponential, at some point, then that won't be the case. Time will tell (assuming this Ol' Fart can continue doing track days).
For street-only use, unless you're a dangerous maniac that's trying to be hard on brakes, it appears that CCB rotors could last the life of the vehicle ... or at least long past the failure point of many other major parts.
might have a sale pending and the gentleman is bringing a more precise scale. If anyone is on the fence for a clean set of these at a very fair price, they might be gone in a day or two.
If your car wasn't "tracked" extensively, I'd have no doubt that the rotors are in prime condition. Nice to see you sold them.
If your car wasn't "tracked" extensively, I'd have no doubt that the rotors are in prime condition. Nice to see you sold them.










