Just to add info gleaned from rear brakes continuation...
At 7k and 18 mth car already had rusting/failing disc surfaces
Took it down a steep long hill pretty quickly when I got it and managed to fade the discs and create a vapour lock.. seems I glazed the pads and cooked the caliper seals from doing this once!
by 14k and 2 yrs both discs were rusting badly
Used hand brake a in safe places for a while to clean up, rust started to come off.. until one day the grind of dead pads was heard
at 19k 2.5 yrs
Fitted cheapo "Powerdrive?" pads/discs for about £45 cost .. hopefully they will be soft enough to wear out quickly and so stay clean!!
Things to note;
1. You do need piston retracter that pushes; I bought a Draper "cube" which I then had to file to fit
.. and then use with a G clamp to push piston back while turning cube with 3/8" extention used in side faces. Better to just get the right tool that some said Halfrauds have.
2. Had to remove carrier brackets to get new discs on unlike the OEM discs; the cap screws were real tight; had to use 12" breaker bar on 1/2" adapter from my impact driver with 8mm adapter fitted. Had to use hammer to make sure they had bottomed in the bolt heads due to crud.
3. Outer pads were virtually brand new except for cracking at the backing plate so probably were "glazed".. this gave the illusion that the pads had plenty of life in them while the inner pads near the pistons were doing all the work.
4. One inner surface still had 1mm rust all over disc even though inner pad was nearly worn out and the handbrake had been used!
5. Fit pad with the warn pad sensor on outside or it might fit with caliper, I cut the sensor down to nothing much as these cars do not have warn pad sensor wiring.
6. Pads/discs are for a Mk4 Golf so pretty common.
7. Rear calipers are alluminum alloy; paint falling off already at 30 mths old on inside
8. You will need to scrape the alloy surface flat where it sits on the brake disc. The OEM discs have a groove which the alloys rusts into and creates a bump.. if you just bolt this up you could have loose wheels or unbalanced wheels
9. Caliper outer boot had a cut/crack already... maybe heat related. Not found any reseal kits for these Lucas calipers
10. I removed the handbrake cable to work on the calipers... easier but not required if you have the right tools and are just doing the pads.
11. I washed discs with petrol and masked them off and then used silver hammerite spray twice. The cheapo discs are not zinc plated like the OEM so did this to stop them bursting into rust next week.. not really perfect but we will see!
12. Cannot put alloys down on their backs without damaging paint
So cannot use them as safety devices to stop car falling on you
Tools
13mm+15mm spanner for caliper bolts
8mm allen key for carriers + 12" lever
piston retraction tool
Big block of wood (2'x8"x8") to knock wheels off!
Big screwdriver to remove handbrake clip and then lever arm down to remove cable
Grease for threads
Spray Dinotrol 3120 for mating surfaces
Masking tape for paint
Hammerite smooth silver spray paint
.. now if they had just made the pads tall and narrow.. this might not be happening on virtually all these cars..
.. as away .. don't do this unless you have a certificate from Goverment, Insurance company, Seat and everyone else in incompetancy