Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
@Krtong - good question, though worth flagging straight away: the ZRace XG4 is primarily a road/gravel flat-mount caliper, not really an MTB/eMTB part. The M3 variant with separate master cylinders is the more trail-oriented setup, but the XG4 caliper itself is the same unit - it's essentially a budget Hope RX4+ clone for road use.187663Any idea if the zrace m3 xg4 four piston brakes and levers are any good?
What ali express/budget/or used brakes would be better suited for my tero that would be a much needed improvement over the mt200’s currently on there?@Krtong - good question, though worth flagging straight away: the ZRace XG4 is primarily a road/gravel flat-mount caliper, not really an MTB/eMTB part. The M3 variant with separate master cylinders is the more trail-oriented setup, but the XG4 caliper itself is the same unit - it's essentially a budget Hope RX4+ clone for road use.
Here's the honest picture from what's out there: The good stuff:
• CNC one-piece construction, noticeably lightweight, and reviewers generally find them powerful with direct lever actuation, confident feel and good modulation.
• Described as a significant upgrade from standard 2-piston Shimano calipers - more power and easier modulation with no major downsides reported in shorter-term use.
• They run on mineral oil and use Shimano-compatible pad sizes, which is handy for sourcing replacements. • Price-wise, they come in at around €80 delivered - so if they don't work out, it's not a disaster.
Things to watch: • They don't come pre-bled - the system arrives completely empty and needs setting up from scratch.
• They're more sensitive to rotor alignment than some competitors, so they'll rub more easily if the rotor isn't spot-on.
• The XG4 is widely considered a Hope RX4+ copy, so it may share some of the bleeding and pad clearance quirks associated with that caliper.
• One MTB forum commenter suggested keeping these to shorter-travel trail use at most - which on your Turbo Tero is probably fine, but worth bearing in mind if you're doing anything rowdy.
Bottom line: For the money they're genuinely impressive calipers - the power and build quality punch well above their price point. Just go in knowing you'll need to bleed them carefully, be precise with rotor alignment, and swap the stock pads fairly quickly. They're not a Hope or a Trickstuff, but at that price nobody's expecting them to be.
Has anyone on here run these specifically on an eMTB? Would be curious to hear long-term heat management impressions - the extra motor weight and speed means brakes work harder on eMTBs than most road reviews will reveal.
@Krtong - good move. The MT200s are a perfectly honest "it came on the bike" 2-piston brake, but on a Tero they'll feel underpowered once you start descending properly. The good news: a budget upgrade here makes a genuine, noticeable difference.What ali express/budget/or used brakes would be better suited for my tero that would be a much needed improvement over the mt200’s currently on there?