Rear brakes hotter than front brakes




What's going on???
Need to compare swept area vs wheel load vs rotor mass vs pad area front and rear to make a clear comparison. Rear brakes are generally smaller than fronts and the fr/rr ratio (pad area, swept area, rotor mass, wheel load) could mean higher rear temps.
Collect a dataset over time of brake temps for your car and other cars in the household to sense check what is happening.
Last edited by chassis; Apr 2, 2025 at 02:19 PM.




Last edited by superswiss; Apr 2, 2025 at 04:31 PM.




Maybe I'm missing something, but in the past when rotors were warped they didn't "get better" meaning they always felt warped. This has only happened 3-4 times in the last 6 months. What ablut all the other times, even when braking hard or moderately.
Last edited by carlosinseattle; Apr 2, 2025 at 04:59 PM.
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For best brake performance, the brakes need to be bedded in properly and re-bedded frequently if you do a lot of daily driving during which the brakes operate in abrasive mode because they are not hot enough and scrape the pad material off the rotors instead of maintaining it. Need to get heat in them regularly. Improperly bedded brakes can have all kinds of issues from noise to inconsistent performance.
Last edited by superswiss; Apr 2, 2025 at 05:49 PM.




Having noticed your rear brakes are working hard under Bosch ESP control:
This is a good time to get them inspected or serviced.

Last edited by CaliBenzDriver; Apr 2, 2025 at 06:34 PM.












I'm pretty sure I bedded the pads properly. I changed the rear pads before I changed the front pads. Is it possible that I caused a problem for the rear pads when I replaced and bedded the fronts a few weeks, maybe 3, later?




Also check the mating surfaces. Hub to disc and disc to wheel, must be completely clean and free of paint or rust.








I'm pretty sure I bedded the pads properly. I changed the rear pads before I changed the front pads. Is it possible that I caused a problem for the rear pads when I replaced and bedded the fronts a few weeks, maybe 3, later?
Last edited by superswiss; Apr 2, 2025 at 09:00 PM.
Our 222 cars; same as all cars which use a brake master cylinder + ABS for braking have a baked in percentage of front/rear brake bias based on boresize in the brake master cylinder, sizes of pistons in calipers, rotors and brake pads. When the car sees a need to intervene due to a driver applying brakes such that one or more wheels may lock, is being a savage and induces wheelspin or a skid the electronics will then intervene via releasing and re-applying brakes for ABS or applying brakes at one or more wheels to slow a spinning wheel or to intervene with a skid. Clever system. Much better done than EBC(?) in 211 and 240 cars, and when a brake master fails you will still have two wheels that get brake pressure VS the joke MB did with the 211 when EBC failed for no brakes with a red warning (maybe!) that reads BRAKE. Suffice to say that was not fun.
99% or more of braking happens without any electronic intervention. Pure application of hydraulic pressure made via your foot with help from the brake booster.
Carlos you have warped rear rotors. It happens. Difference in temperature front VS rear is nothing. I’d be concerned if rear brakes were 900 degrees and fronts were 120 but what you measured is a nothing-burger. Not even a Dick’s Deluxe. There is a break-in procedure for rotors that Brembo suggests. It never worked for me with my 221 S-65. I just accepted that being a savage I would (and did) always have warped brakes. CCB does not do that.
Last edited by JohnLane; Apr 3, 2025 at 01:39 AM.
I'm pretty sure I bedded the pads properly. I changed the rear pads before I changed the front pads. Is it possible that I caused a problem for the rear pads when I replaced and bedded the fronts a few weeks, maybe 3, later?
If you are working rear brakes super hard with applying power you may wish to consider installing a Quaife differential.
Last edited by JohnLane; Apr 3, 2025 at 01:44 AM.




Our 222 cars; same as all cars which use a brake master cylinder + ABS for braking have a baked in percentage of front/rear brake bias based on boresize in the brake master cylinder, sizes of pistons in calipers, rotors and brake pads. When the car sees a need to intervene due to a driver applying brakes such that one or more wheels may lock, is being a savage and induces wheelspin or a skid the electronics will then intervene via releasing and re-applying brakes for ABS or applying brakes at one or more wheels to slow a spinning wheel or to intervene with a skid. Clever system. Much better done than EBC(?) in 211 and 240 cars, and when a brake master fails you will still have two wheels that get brake pressure VS the joke MB did with the 211 when EBC failed for no brakes with a red warning (maybe!) that reads BRAKE. Suffice to say that was not fun.
99% or more of braking happens without any electronic intervention. Pure application of hydraulic pressure made via your foot with help from the brake booster.
Carlos you have warped rear rotors. It happens. Difference in temperature front VS rear is nothing. I’d be concerned if rear brakes were 900 degrees and fronts were 120 but what you measured is a nothing-burger. Not even a Dick’s Deluxe. There is a break-in procedure for rotors that Brembo suggests. It never worked for me with my 221 S-65. I just accepted that being a savage I would (and did) always have warped brakes. CCB does not do that.
https://www.mbusa.com/en/owners/manu...e-distribution
Last edited by superswiss; Apr 3, 2025 at 01:45 AM.












I have owned cars from the 60's till now. Replace the brake hoses every so often. Dirt and rubber gets into the hoses and they impede the flow of brake fluid.
I have 100% fixed sticky brake calipers with new hoses. Friend was arguing with me, he wanted to get new calipers as his was locking up and overheating the brakes.
I said, lets do the hoses first, its cheap. It worked. Replace the hoses and flush the brake fluid. Its cheap and easy to do. Hoses are $15 or so each and they do go bad over time.
Last edited by waterzap99; Apr 12, 2025 at 05:24 PM.




