kyle9
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Kyle
- Joined
- May 19, 2022
- Threads
- 24
- Messages
- 426
- Reaction score
- 574
- Location
- Chicago, IL
- Car(s)
- '22 Supra - Gridlife StreetMod #29, '23 B48 Supra
When I switched from OE to CSG pads...I bought new rotors for the car. When I switched the fronts from CSG to Pagid RSL29, I bought new front rotors for the car. I suppose while we're b!tchin' about brake pads, I'll report back on the RSL29s again.
At this point, I've done 5 track days with the car on these pads, all at CMP (notoriously hard on brakes).
Pros:
They are consistent and predictable from cold to hot
They work well cold
I've yet to fade them (back to back sessions with 2 drivers)
Easy-to-feel release characteristics
Easy on rotors compared to CSGs
Bedded on the street with new rotors, no shudder at all
Good street manners
Cons:
Price - expensive, but at least cheaper than CSGs
Availability is sparse
Not a lot of initial bite, especially compared to CSGs...but these are enduro pads so that's probably a feature, not a bug
Easy to overdrive - likely a "me" problem, but I end up overshooting the braking zones more than I'm used to. I'm also more aggressive at CMP than ANYWHERE else, again probably a me problem.
I ran the RSL 1 on my rear axle once and managed to overheat them in 3 laps at ABCC. RSL 1 is a higher friction and more heat tolerant pad than RSL 29, so I can't imagine the 29 would withstand many laps with grippy tires or on a car with much hp.
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