You can sand down the surface's of the pads and the disk (both inside and out)...
Also there is a spray/paint that you can use called "brake quite"... it's usually blue or red... you spray it on the BACK (the contact area between the backside of the pad and the piston) of the pad and on all the shims.. this is a pretty common cause of brake squeeking although I have NO idea how...
Also the slamming on the brakes bit CAN work if you know what you're doing but as mentioned by Pdig it can also worsen your problem... and even cause new ones.
If it bother's you that much take it all apart sand all the surfaces and use the brake quite stuff... and from now on DO NOT use soft slow braking.. that will cause the pads to glaze... although most pads these days are pretty resistant to glazing.
It's probobly the shims. it's pretty common... mine did that the first time I did my pads on my current car... the shop I was at didn't have any brake quite at the time...
Oh... and honda ships all there pads with new shims and the proper grease to prevent squeeking...
I always use OEM pads... even with aftermarket rotors. I'd rather chew through pads more often than chewing through rotors.
__________________
I am an A$$hole... take anything I say to heart at YOUR OWN RISK...
|