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Mondraker SLy R Brake Upgrade

Mylaguna

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I have a 2025 Mondraker Sly R. Upgrades are Fox 36 factory optimized fork and fox float X shock. My writing weight is 285 pounds. To upgrade the brakes should I upgrade to the 220 mm rotor and metallic pad pads for the SRAM DB8 calipers. We're just bite the bullet and upgrade calipers on a 200 mm rotor
 
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Welcome to the forums, @Mylaguna. At 285lbs (roughly 129kg) with a full-power eMTB, braking is genuinely important to get right, so good on you for thinking about this early.

The honest answer is: at your weight, I'd do both. Upgrade to 220mm rotors and swap the pads to metallic compounds on the DB8 calipers as a first step, and see how you feel before spending on new calipers entirely. Here's why.

The DB8 is a 4-piston caliper, so it's not fundamentally lacking in clamping area. The issue at your weight is heat management, and that's where rotor size makes the biggest difference. Going from 200mm to 220mm gives you a meaningfully larger heat sink and more leverage at the caliper. For the front on your Fox 36, you'll need a PM+20mm adapter since the 2026 Fox 36 uses an oddball 200mm post mount (not 180mm as on older models). @Rod B. laid out the adapter maths for Fox forks nicely: post mount height plus adapter size equals rotor size, so 200 + 20 = 220mm. For the rear, you'll need whatever adapter suits your frame's post mount spec.

For rotors, the SRAM HS2 in 220mm is a solid choice. They're 2mm thick versus the 1.8mm you see on Shimano rotors, so they last noticeably longer under eMTB abuse. @Winford reckons the HS2s are a worthwhile upgrade specifically because of that extra thickness. Metallic (sintered) pads will give you more consistent power when things get hot, which they will at your weight on any sustained descent.

If after running 220mm rotors with sintered pads you're still finding the DB8 levers feel vague or you're pulling them to the bar, then it's worth looking at a caliper and lever upgrade. One option that's been well received in the community is keeping the DB8 calipers but swapping to Shimano M6100 levers, which reportedly transforms the feel and power for around £50. @Darren66 did exactly this on a Crafty R that came with DB8s and called it the strongest brakes he'd ever had, using Magura Blood mineral oil for the bleed. That's a fraction of the cost of full SRAM Maven or Shimano Saint calipers.

So the sequence I'd suggest: 220mm SRAM HS2 rotors front and rear, sintered pads, correct adapters. Ride it. If it's still not enough, swap the levers to Shimano M6100. If that's still not enough, then you're into full caliper territory, but I suspect you won't need to go that far.

Edit: Corrected the Fox 36 post mount spec - the 2026 Fox 36 uses a 200mm post mount, not 180mm, so you need a PM+20mm adapter rather than PM+40mm to run a 220mm rotor. Cheers Winford for the correction!
 
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Cool! Thank You! The new Fox 36 EMTB comes 200mm ready so so should only need the 20mm sram bracket. I will follow your recommendations. Make sense!
 
Cool! Thank You! The new Fox 36 EMTB comes 200mm ready so so should only need the 20mm sram bracket. I will follow your recommendations. Make sense!
Good stuff, @Mylaguna. You're right, if the Fox 36 eMTB edition comes with a 200mm post mount, then a 20mm adapter gets you to 220mm. That simplifies things nicely.

Enjoy the new stoppers, and let us know how they feel once you've had a few runs on them. At your weight you should notice a genuine difference with the bigger rotors and sintered pads, especially on anything sustained.
 
your Fox 36, you'll need a PM+40mm adapter since the Fox 36 uses a 180mm post mount.
That used to be true. On the 2026 fox 36 they use a 200 mount, not 203 like you would think, but an oddball 200 mount
 
That used to be true. On the 2026 fox 36 they use a 200 mount, not 203 like you would think, but an oddball 200 mount
Good catch, @Winford, and you're right to flag it. I've already updated the original post above to reflect the correct 200mm mount spec on the 2026 Fox 36, so @Mylaguna has the accurate adapter maths. Cheers for keeping me honest on that one.
 
So I took the advice and upgraded to the 220 mm rotor with the sintered pads. So I'll be breaking them in tomorrow, but I already love the feel on the lover! Thanks for the advice, folks!
 
So I took the advice and upgraded to the 220 mm rotor with the sintered pads. So I'll be breaking them in tomorrow, but I already love the feel on the lover! Thanks for the advice, folks!
Glad to hear it, @Mylaguna. At your riding weight, that 220mm rotor with sintered pads is going to make a genuine difference once they're properly bedded in.

Speaking of which, don't rush the bed-in. You want around 20 or more moderate-speed decelerations, gradually building pressure rather than grabbing a handful from the start. The goal is to transfer an even layer of pad material onto the rotor surface. If you clean the rotor with disc brake cleaner afterwards, you'll strip that layer off and have to start again, so resist the urge. The brakes will feel a bit wooden for the first few rides, then they'll come alive.

Let us know how they feel once they've got some miles on them.
 
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