- Brakes
How Potholes and Kerb Strikes Can Impact Brakes

Updated 16 Dec 2025
Bendix

In recent years, standard passenger car rim sizes have increased, and the tyres they’re shod with have lost sidewall height. While these tyre and wheel packages may look the part, the trend comes with some risk.
The compromise with low-profile tyres is that there’s a greater likelihood of damaging wheels, suspension and braking components, especially when travelling over suspect road surfaces or through poor driving.
As well as improving aesthetics, low-profile tyres can indeed deliver several performance benefits for drivers, such as improved cornering grip, reduced tyre ‘squirm’, sharper steering response and better braking due to a shorter sidewall transmitting brake force more directly.
The bigger rims they’re fitted to also allow vehicles to run larger diameter rotors and brake calipers with more pistons for better braking, but this all comes at the expense of reduced cushioning compared to tyres with taller sidewalls.
More traditional tyre sizes hold a greater volume of air and allow for extra sidewall flex, resulting in a more supple ride and greater impact resistance should the motorist drive over a pothole or hit a kerb. There are benefits to having a larger sidewall in the case of four-wheel drives as well, including the ability to further air down tyre pressures for greater traction off-road.
How are brakes affected?
While the braking system is generally well protected within the rim, it’s the flow-on effects of a kerb strike or driving over a large pothole that can ultimately impact the brakes also. One particular vulnerability is the wheel hub. The hub flange is the flat surface that the brake rotors mount against. If the flange is damaged from impact and doesn’t sit flat, the brake rotor will, in turn, not sit true, leading to flange run-out.
Flange run-out can also be caused by installation error (such as when a hub or bearing is over-torqued) and from corrosion; flange run-out is then amplified once the rotor is fitted, eventually leading to Disc Thickness Variation (DVT).
DVT is caused by side-to-side movement in the brake pads as the rotor rotates, rather than the rotors circulating through an even plane. Eventually, this leads to excessive wear at certain points on the rotors because of clamp force variations due to the calipers applying varying pressure to the pads on the misaligned surface. For the driver, they’ll notice that the brake pedal will pulse or vibrate when applied. Not only does this feel annoying underfoot, but stopping distances will also increase.
With the questionable state of many roads – particularly in rural and remote areas – obstacles such as potholes and crumbling road edges are common challenges that motorists must regularly overcome. So if drivers do encounter one of these obstacles that they can’t avoid, and then experience symptoms such as brake pedal pulse, unusual underbody noises or their car not tracking properly, they should visit a mechanic as soon as possible for a safety check.

Written By
Bendix
Bendix, Australia’s leading brake manufacturer since 1955 is part of the international FMP Group, a world leader in brake technology.
FMP’s Australian manufacturing operation, based in Ballarat VIC, it is the regional technical centre of excellence in advanced research and development for Asia Pacific and a key original equipment supplier to leading vehicle manufacturers.
The Bendix program caters for the widest range of vehicle applications including 4WD’s and heavy commercial vehicles and trailers.
Automotive workshops can select from technically advanced Bendix products including General CT, 4WD/SUV, Heavy Duty, Euro+, Ultimate, Street Road Track, Brake Shoes, Commercial Vehicle, Brake Lubrication, Brake Fluid and Brake Parts Cleaner/Degreaser.