What about it fam?
Is there a question...?
What a detailed informative post!
Seems like there’s some meat left on those.
Regenerative braking folks. /thread done.
Still plenty of pad left!
Ok, here is more info. It looks like brand new.
I thought everyone with Tesla knows about it. Haha.
I'm more impressed that the rotors looks so clean! You probably don't have a lot of salt on your roads?
We do, which is why we’re all wondering what the point of this post is?
I’ve seen many say they can go over 100k miles before needing new pads/rotors. I would recommend having your brake fluid changed around that 100k mile mark, if you still have the car that is. But yes, they look great for now.
No you don't because you don't even understand the point of my post.
I am in PNW, WA but not close to the ocean.
I was a bit unclear, I was talking about salt on the roads for clearing ice, not salt from the water😅
Ah I see
I love how you claim somebody doesn't understand it. But you don't explain it even after you take notice that nobody understands it. Nice work
LOL, you are one of them. Good for you.
People vague post on Reddit now?
you didn't explain anything, obviously no one understands.
Explain WHAT? The brake pads condition on a 50k miles Tesla aren't enough?
This reminds me. I need to pull my calipers and grease the slide pins.
Its amazing. The pads lasted about 150,000 miles on my 2000 Honda Insight. Love the regen, and it’s even better on my 2020 MYLR.
Solid shitpost. Whether it’s intentional or not…
Wether? LOL
My conclusion based on the post and this response is the OP has the IQ of his brake pad.
You got 50k miles out of your last set of tires?
I'll take it 😀
You guys are so SMART.
And what is the highlight here that isn’t common knowledge with a Tesla and brake pads ? lol
Good reminder to disable automatic braking if you dont want unexpected wear. At least, I saw it in the UI \~1 yr ago, and disabled it. But those look great. Nice work tesla engineers (and electric car physics). Regenerative braking for the win.
Yep, nearly 50k
I have 20k miles on my Hankook ion evos they started at 10/32 and are just at 8/32 now
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Although 100k mile is usually okay. Brake fluid is hydroscopic so 3 year is the ideal interval.
Haha I forgot to mention or 4 years, whichever comes first. Solid point!
we're not all mechanics. I don't know if these brakes look good or bad.
Isn’t recommended replacement at like 150k miles or something dumb? We really don’t use our brakes
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