Waiex 49 wrote:Hi Mike,
How do you like your Sonex disc brakes so far? Any info you could share would be appreciated.
They work well. WAY better than the mechanical brakes. I've had them installed now for 2 years and have not had to replace the pucks. I'm sure I will in the spring, but when I looked at them a couple of weeks ago they were still in good shape. I have everything bolted to the single tab and have not had any issues with bending or loosening. I certainly DID with the mechanical brakes, but the hydraulic brakes put very different loads on the tab, so no issues.
It takes a LOT of pumping to get the brake lines to bleed, so when you do it you need to do it for way longer than you think you should. If the brakes feel at all mushy then you need to keep bleeding. The system is quite solid and un-mushy with no air bubbles in the lines.
I have experienced some minor leakage from around the seal where the plunger enters the master cylinder. Not a lot, but enough to notice a thin film on the floor over time. But not enough to even need to add fluid. But still I never leave my brakes set in parking mode; 1) I don't need to, but 2) I'd be afraid the fluid would leak under pressure over time.
I don't know why the factory holes in the backing plates appear to have no way to work in reality. Maybe I just couldn't see what was right in front of me, but I could not come up with any configuration (up, down, backward, forward) that would make any sense. Hence my having to make my own holes. Would love it if Sonex came out with a YouTube video showing how it's supposed to work.
All in all the switch over was relatively simple and well worth the effort. I can't say I've run into too may situations where I wanted or needed differential toe brakes, but I can see some instances where it would be desirable.