MexicanFiestaST
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 26, 2020
- Threads
- 7
- Messages
- 53
- Reaction score
- 76
- Location
- Canton, MI
- First Name
- Ed
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 Mustang GT
- Thread starter
- #1
In my sig: 2020 GT, PP1 with staggered set up, Brembo front brakes, AE, currently sitting at 56k miles
For a long time now, I hear a clunk when first applying the brakes. This is most noticeable at low speeds, when there is less competing noise, such as when moving the car in the drive way, or shuffling your way through the drive through window. I was convinced that a bolt(s) was loose somewhere, and searched in vain through the following suspects:
I used to be absolutely convinced by the nature and timbre and feel through my body of the clunk that some large subframe bolt had worked loose(or fallen out), so that was the first place I looked when the clunk first appeared, but no dice. Then I thought maybe the calipers were moving in an unusual manner(bearing in mind the rears float on the pins, while the front Brembos are not supposed to), but nothing unusual there, either.
This makes me think it's merely the sound of the pads smacking the rotors, but I consider myself to be a pretty smooth operator(especially when I have a passenger who does NOT want to be impressed, like my wife, lol). BTW, she's also an engineer, yet we disagree which end of the car the noise is coming from. The passenger hears a different location than the driver.
My last attempt was to take a sledge hammer, and gently tap various bolts and joints, including parts of the subframe and brake systems, anything that I think could move to make the clunk, and found nothing but rock solid connections everywhere I tried. Yes, I'm particularly careful not to create the problem I'm trying to solve; I'm just using the mass of the sledge with low effort to try and detect something loose. I am a mechanical engineer with lots of experience, including NVH experience, which comes with the paranoia about systems not working like I think they should, and a mind full of the usual suspects, based on the characteristics of the noise. This makes it worse, lol.
For now, I've merely adopted an inspection routine every time the car is up(oil change, tire rotation, etc), and will keep looking. I'm slightly paranoid something is loose, so I want to catch it, and not ignore it. But so far, nothing has fallen off the car, nothing I could find is loose, and the severity of the clunk has not changed.
I've never owned a vehicle that does this.
Functionally, there is nothing wrong with the brakes. I love the brakes, and the instant feedback, and the immediate response, and how freaking solid they feel, and how powerful they are. I inspect the pad thickness every time it's on the hoist, and I'm surprised there is plenty of life left. I have complete confidence in the brakes. It just bugs the crap out of me that I can't find the source of the clunk.
Apologies if this was posted before, and solution found. If so, just point me to the link and shake your head, lol
For a long time now, I hear a clunk when first applying the brakes. This is most noticeable at low speeds, when there is less competing noise, such as when moving the car in the drive way, or shuffling your way through the drive through window. I was convinced that a bolt(s) was loose somewhere, and searched in vain through the following suspects:
- All the bolts between caliper and the frame(anchor bolts, sliding pins, suspension arms, etc)
- sway bar links
- Subframe connectors
- All suspension arms and related bolts
- Wheels(when attached the car)
- The hub rings in the wheels are still there(not missing), and there is no rotational vibration whatsoever to suggest anything is no longer round, or become uncentered.
- Hubs and rotors(looking for loose bearings, even though I do not hear typical bearing noise)
I used to be absolutely convinced by the nature and timbre and feel through my body of the clunk that some large subframe bolt had worked loose(or fallen out), so that was the first place I looked when the clunk first appeared, but no dice. Then I thought maybe the calipers were moving in an unusual manner(bearing in mind the rears float on the pins, while the front Brembos are not supposed to), but nothing unusual there, either.
This makes me think it's merely the sound of the pads smacking the rotors, but I consider myself to be a pretty smooth operator(especially when I have a passenger who does NOT want to be impressed, like my wife, lol). BTW, she's also an engineer, yet we disagree which end of the car the noise is coming from. The passenger hears a different location than the driver.
My last attempt was to take a sledge hammer, and gently tap various bolts and joints, including parts of the subframe and brake systems, anything that I think could move to make the clunk, and found nothing but rock solid connections everywhere I tried. Yes, I'm particularly careful not to create the problem I'm trying to solve; I'm just using the mass of the sledge with low effort to try and detect something loose. I am a mechanical engineer with lots of experience, including NVH experience, which comes with the paranoia about systems not working like I think they should, and a mind full of the usual suspects, based on the characteristics of the noise. This makes it worse, lol.
For now, I've merely adopted an inspection routine every time the car is up(oil change, tire rotation, etc), and will keep looking. I'm slightly paranoid something is loose, so I want to catch it, and not ignore it. But so far, nothing has fallen off the car, nothing I could find is loose, and the severity of the clunk has not changed.
I've never owned a vehicle that does this.
Functionally, there is nothing wrong with the brakes. I love the brakes, and the instant feedback, and the immediate response, and how freaking solid they feel, and how powerful they are. I inspect the pad thickness every time it's on the hoist, and I'm surprised there is plenty of life left. I have complete confidence in the brakes. It just bugs the crap out of me that I can't find the source of the clunk.
Apologies if this was posted before, and solution found. If so, just point me to the link and shake your head, lol
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