Description
TRP P-Q15TS Sintered / Metallic Pads: 4 Piston
UPC: 4717592032574
TRP mpn: P-Q15TS
The TRP P-Q15TS is a sintered brake pad for the ultimate performance in any conditions.
The TRP P-Q15TS fits all 4 piston TRP brakes including the Quadiem, DH-R, Slate and Q2.3 series as well as a variety of Shimano calipers as well.
TRP 4 piston pads are available in Semi-Metallic / Resin as well as Sintered compounds.
TRP 4 Piston Pad Cross Compatibility
Pad Shape #50
Along with the 4 piston TRP brakes the Q20.11 pads are popular service parts for Shimano brakes as well.
Compatible with Shimano 4 piston brakes including:
XTR BR-M9120
XT BR-M8120
SLX BR-M7120
Deore BR-M6120
XT BR-M8020
Saint BR-M820
Zee BR-M640
BR-MT520
BR-MT420
Do You Need To Replace Your Rotors As Well?
The nature of brake pad and rotor interface means they will wear together. Ideally you will be able to replace your brake pads a few times before you need to replace your rotors. however there can be some conditions that make it necessary to replace the rotors sooner. Let’s look at a few.
Rotor Wear:
The easiest thing to check is the rotor wear limit.
A Magura rotor that is less than 1.8mm wide is considered worn. SRAM rotors less than 1.5mm are worn. Shimano rotors less than 1.5mm or if any of the aluminum “Ice-Tech” material appears are considered worn.
Running too thin of a rotor will compromise brake bite as well as heat capacity. In extreme cases it can lead to rotor separation which will cause damage and potentially severe injury.
Rotor Shape:
If the previous pads have worn shapes into the rotor your performance will be compromised. Whether the rotor shows knife edge, bulge or convex anything but parallel surfaces will cause contact patch issues.
These issues will create extreme “hot-spots” on the new brake pads which, in some conditions, can super heat the pad – glazing it and compromising the friction coefficient (bite, power, heat capacity are all effected).
We have seen cases where new brake pads become unusable due to this severe heat modifying the pad’s makeup glazing not just the contact surfaces but essentially glazing the entire pad material.
A rule of thumb is rotors should be replaced about every three or four sets of pads. It will pay dividends to check the rotor’s condition before installing new pads!