Sponsored

Brake Options

KiloWhiskey

Well-known member
First Name
Kyle
Joined
Jan 21, 2021
Threads
7
Messages
111
Reaction score
119
Location
Oregon
Vehicles
2021 F150 PB XLT(Ordered 1/21/2021[still waiting])
Occupation
Military (Ret)
So I am needing to replace the Brakes on my F150. I am wanting to upgrade my brakes with a whole kit. I have been reading that the stock f150 rotors aren’t the best so I’d rather replace them while my pads are being replaced. With all that being said (I have been searching around) I am looking for a good upgrade. I tow quite a bit and would like a little more comfort in knowing my brakes will perform better. I know nothing about brakes to be honest so I’m looking for suggestions. I’m open to new calipers too if that’s actually something people recommend. Any help is appreciated. Thanks again.
Sponsored

 

My 2ND Ford

Well-known member
First Name
David
Joined
Jun 28, 2021
Threads
25
Messages
728
Reaction score
790
Location
Ny
Vehicles
2021 f-150 Platinum, 2014 BMW R1200RT
Occupation
Retired
So I am needing to replace the Brakes on my F150. I am wanting to upgrade my brakes with a whole kit. I have been reading that the stock f150 rotors aren’t the best so I’d rather replace them while my pads are being replaced. With all that being said (I have been searching around) I am looking for a good upgrade. I tow quite a bit and would like a little more comfort in knowing my brakes will perform better. I know nothing about brakes to be honest so I’m looking for suggestions. I’m open to new calipers too if that’s actually something people recommend. Any help is appreciated. Thanks again.
Ok, here is my 2 cents on brakes and my opinion is from working 40 plus years at Napa auto parts. If you are looking at upgrading your brakes, consider a complete kit from one of the performance manufacturers such as Power stop and Brembo. Always do pads and rotors, stay away from drilled rotors, they have a tendency to crack. Slotted are fine. If you do upgrade the front brakes, don't forget the rears, especially if you increase the size of your front rotors. I would consider upgrading the calipers as well.
When deciding on pad and rotor composition , ask the manufacturer how the brakes preform when wet with rain or snow. Most brakes preform well when wet, that's what people expect, but there are combinations that do not preform when wet until they have dried off with a few rotations of the rotor and that causes a slight delay in brake action, causing some panic in people when you don't expect it. I speak from experience with this.
Search thru the forum site and you should be able to find some info on brake upgrades. If you do decide on pads, rotors and calipers, make sure everything will fit with your current brackets and wheels. Good luck.
 

Fox146

Well-known member
First Name
Dana
Joined
Nov 1, 2023
Threads
7
Messages
400
Reaction score
429
Location
Canada
Vehicles
21 limited sold
I’ve used powerstop kits with no issues. Not sure I noticed any real improvements as basically it’s all the same size maybe better pads etc. But they worked good and looked good
 
Last edited:

HammaMan

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 7, 2022
Threads
123
Messages
8,526
Reaction score
9,934
Location
SE US
Vehicles
2022 307a PB
How much you wanting to spend? The 15.5" rotor kit requires 20" wheels and runs about $2500. If you're just wanting new rotors/pads, I've put ~dozen Z36 kits on vehicles with no issues on everything from small toyotas to F250s. There's slightly less thermal mass in drilled/slotted but they also have better cooling area due to more surface area.

The biggest issue I've seen with any brakes is people not understanding how to actually brake on extended grades. One of my sisters is the biggest offender and I haven't found a set of rotors/pads she can't glaze over. Also be sure to clean the caliper guide pins / recesses of grease / material and lube them up.
 

Sponsored

SilverSpur

Well-known member
First Name
Tony
Joined
Jul 25, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
126
Reaction score
41
Location
Joplin Mo
Vehicles
2021 F150 XLT, 08 Charger RT, 24 Santa Fe Hybrid
Occupation
Retired
Might want to look at brake pad material. I have been using ceramic over composite for many years. It's just a thought.
 

jhelrey

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 18, 2023
Threads
39
Messages
830
Reaction score
651
Location
MN
Vehicles
2024 F-150 CC Lariat 3.5PB 4X4 3.73 SB
Toss Bosch rotors and ceramic pads on it and be done.
 

missileboy

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 22, 2024
Threads
9
Messages
153
Reaction score
271
Location
MD
Vehicles
24 F150
Wilwood make a nice 6 piston kit for the f150 fronts. ~1600 for the calipers, rotors, pads and SS flex lines and new mount bolts.
 

HammaMan

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 7, 2022
Threads
123
Messages
8,526
Reaction score
9,934
Location
SE US
Vehicles
2022 307a PB
Wilwood make a nice 6 piston kit for the f150 fronts. ~1600 for the calipers, rotors, pads and SS flex lines and new mount bolts.
Yes, but the clamping force (aka piston volume) is the same while also using the same rotor sizes thus you're not really gaining anything. Upgrading to braided lines on the factory calipers provides the same performance.
 

Sponsored


OP
OP
KiloWhiskey

KiloWhiskey

Well-known member
First Name
Kyle
Joined
Jan 21, 2021
Threads
7
Messages
111
Reaction score
119
Location
Oregon
Vehicles
2021 F150 PB XLT(Ordered 1/21/2021[still waiting])
Occupation
Military (Ret)
How much you wanting to spend? The 15.5" rotor kit requires 20" wheels and runs about $2500. If you're just wanting new rotors/pads, I've put ~dozen Z36 kits on vehicles with no issues on everything from small toyotas to F250s. There's slightly less thermal mass in drilled/slotted but they also have better cooling area due to more surface area.

The biggest issue I've seen with any brakes is people not understanding how to actually brake on extended grades. One of my sisters is the biggest offender and I haven't found a set of rotors/pads she can't glaze over. Also be sure to clean the caliper guide pins / recesses of grease / material and lube them up.
I do have the powerboost, does that matter when it comes to replacing rotors?
 

Captain Dirty Beard

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 20, 2024
Threads
11
Messages
336
Reaction score
360
Location
Colorado
Vehicles
2023 Lariat Powerboost, 2022 MACH1 HP
I do have the powerboost, does that matter when it comes to replacing rotors?
You might be surprised what a new set of rotors, and Semi-metallic pads do for you. OEM Pads are a ceramic compound, and prioritize quite operation and low dust. Semi metallic pads will bite much harder, and provide more fade resistance, at the expense of more dust and potentially a bit more noise.

If the brakes on your current setup can stop the wheels from spinning/engage ABS, then you are at the maximum braking force anyway.

There are fixed caliper kit options available, but the advantage here is really only thermal management for repeated stops, towing heavy loads.

https://www.summitracing.com/parts/WIL-140-17000-R
 

Marcsrx

Well-known member
First Name
Marc
Joined
Jun 13, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
49
Reaction score
54
Location
STL
Vehicles
RCSB 24 F150 XL, 2020 BMW M2, 2005 Evo 8 MR, 1995 JDM Evo 3 GSR
Occupation
VoIP
You can lockup the wheel with OE calipers/rotors. The issue is heat which causes fade. To solve this you need a pad with a higher friction coefficient, and fluid with a higher boiling point.

I'd stay away from drilled rotors, not due to cracking but because you are actually reducing the friction surface. Slotted are better because it ensures the pad surface remains "clean".

People tend to think you need massive calipers/rotors for good braking performance but its just not the case. Larger rotors act as a larger heat sink, and potentially increase the leverage of the caliper depending on mounting and pad, but again if you can lockup the wheel with a given brake setup this is not your issue.

You are also limited by the grip your tires can generate BTW.
 

Graygoose2021

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 18, 2021
Threads
37
Messages
2,780
Reaction score
2,846
Location
Oklahoma
Vehicles
2021 F150
Occupation
Sales
Ditto on TBM....but expensive.
 

starcommtrey1

Well-known member
First Name
Trey
Joined
Aug 14, 2024
Threads
10
Messages
124
Reaction score
118
Location
Boligee, AL
Vehicles
24 150, 24 Escape, 08 Fat Boy, 07 350, 06 Wrangler
Ok, here is my 2 cents on brakes and my opinion is from working 40 plus years at Napa auto parts. If you are looking at upgrading your brakes, consider a complete kit from one of the performance manufacturers such as Power stop and Brembo. Always do pads and rotors, stay away from drilled rotors, they have a tendency to crack. Slotted are fine. If you do upgrade the front brakes, don't forget the rears, especially if you increase the size of your front rotors. I would consider upgrading the calipers as well.
When deciding on pad and rotor composition , ask the manufacturer how the brakes preform when wet with rain or snow. Most brakes preform well when wet, that's what people expect, but there are combinations that do not preform when wet until they have dried off with a few rotations of the rotor and that causes a slight delay in brake action, causing some panic in people when you don't expect it. I speak from experience with this.
Search thru the forum site and you should be able to find some info on brake upgrades. If you do decide on pads, rotors and calipers, make sure everything will fit with your current brackets and wheels. Good luck.
I use drilled AND slotted rotors on my 350 and tow HEAVY. I have had zero issues with them and would recommend then all day long.
Sponsored

 
 







Top