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Parts for your 2025 Mitsubishi Asx-Brake shoes

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2025 Mitsubishi ASX brake-shoes — are they used, and what to service instead?

For the 2025 Mitsubishi ASX sold in Australia and New Zealand, brake shoes aren’t a thing. This model uses four-wheel disc brakes — ventilated discs up front and solid discs at the rear — with a caliper‑integrated parking brake, so there are no drum brake shoes fitted anywhere on the vehicle.

That call is backed by technical material: Mitsubishi Motors Australia ASX specifications for current models note disc brakes front and rear, and the ASX/RVR factory service manual details a rear disc brake with an integrated parking/handbrake mechanism at the caliper rather than a drum‑in‑hat shoe setup. Independent specification guides used locally (such as RedBook listings for late‑model ASX) also record “disc rear brakes,” aligning with Mitsubishi’s own documentation.

Brake shoes are used in drum brakes, where curved friction linings press outward on a drum. The 2025 ASX doesn’t use drums, it opts for discs for better heat control, consistent pedal feel, and strong performance with stability and traction systems. Even some cars with rear discs still hide a small drum shoe for the parking brake, but the ASX’s parking brake acts directly on the rear calipers — so there’s no separate set of shoes to replace.

What should owners ask for when they’re thinking “brake-shoes” on a 2025 ASX? They actually want rear brake pads. During routine servicing, a workshop will focus on the disc brake system instead of any shoes.

  • Replace front and rear brake pads when they’re worn or glazed, inspect pad thickness at each service.
  • Measure rotors and machine or replace if below minimum thickness or showing heat spots, cracks, or heavy ridging.
  • Clean and lubricate caliper slide pins, check caliper operation and the parking brake mechanism for smooth, even clamping.
  • Flush brake fluid every 24 months (or per the service schedule) to keep pedal feel and corrosion resistance on point.
  • Adjust or calibrate the parking brake (mechanical or electric, depending on variant) so it holds firmly without dragging.

Bottom line: for a 2025 Mitsubishi ASX, “brake-shoes” isn’t a relevant part. Ask for rear brake pads and any hardware that suits the disc brake system.

Popular questions about 2025 Mitsubishi ASX brake-shoes

Does a 2025 Mitsubishi ASX have brake shoes?
No. It runs rear disc brakes with a caliper‑integrated parking brake, so there are no drum brake shoes fitted. This layout is confirmed by Mitsubishi’s specs and service manual content for current ASX models sold in AU/NZ.

What do I replace instead of brake shoes on a 2025 ASX?
Replace the rear brake pads when worn, and service the rear rotors as needed. A good service will also clean/lube caliper slides, check the parking brake mechanism, and replace brake fluid on schedule.

How often should the rear brakes be checked?
Have pad thickness and rotor condition checked at every regular service (typically 10,000–15,000 km or 6–12 months, depending on your schedule). Pad life varies with driving, but many owners see 30,000–70,000 km. City and hilly driving will shorten that.

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