heinzboehmer do you run the spring rattle clips with those?
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AP Racing, Freaky Parts, 996, Cooling? School me on BBK to help pad consumption
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I do yeah2002 Topasblau M3 - Coupe - 6MT - Karbonius CSL Airbox - MSS54HP Conversion - Kassel MAP - SSV1 - HJS - PCS Tune - Beisan - MK60 Swap - ZCP Rack - Nogaros - AutoSolutions - 996 Brembos - Slon - CMP - VinceBar - Koni - Eibach - BlueBus - Journal
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Interesting. Bimmerworld says not to run them with their kit, but I'm wondering if that actually hurts pedal feel since you now have to use part of the pedal travel to take up any slack in the piston/pad.
Out at The Glen today with fresh pads and rotors. Hoping to see some wear improvements with these Vorshlag ducts!
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Originally posted by Nate047 View PostUnrelated but kind of related, I recently picked up a set of DB9 calipers and Vagbremtechnic brackets and hoses. Their brackets are a nicer and cleaner looking than the Freakyparts brackets. But material wise I believe they are the same.
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Originally posted by Nate047 View PostUnrelated but kind of related, I recently picked up a set of DB9 calipers and Vagbremtechnic brackets and hoses. Their brackets are a nicer and cleaner looking than the Freakyparts brackets. But material wise I believe they are the same.
I'm looking at the biasing if I were to do FR Aston calipers on 325mm rotors, and either 1) keep stock non-ZCP rear calipers or 2) install my rebuilt stock ZCP rear calipers.
What color did you get?!
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Fair warning, VBT does not ship to the US currently, full stop... I had to ship the parts to my friend in Germany who then turned around and shipped them to me. It was definitely not economical in the long run, but whatever. This car has been one giant financial snowball after another so does it really even matter? Live and learn. I bought some used calipers separately, which also for the record was the wrong choice. In total it will cost me a couple hundred bucks more to rebuild and powdercoat the calipers, including new pins and clips, dust boots, bleeders, and cross over pipes. I should have just bought the full kit including rebuilt calipers from VBT.
I'm doing DB9 fronts with 345mm rotors and 996 rears. My car is an early MK20 ABS car, which also has a different master cylinder, so the stock brake bias is more towards the rear than on later cars.
So according to my ricer math, the early master cyl plus the combo of 996 rears and the DB9 front 40/44mm piston pairing should be a little better than the 40/40mm pistons of the Megane, moving the bias forward and closer to the ballpark of a stock CSL brake bias. And in theory these will be a little better for tapered pad wear also. Still use the same D1001 pads. The DB9 calipers weigh about .5lb more each than the Megane caliper.
I might sell the Freakyparts kit, but I may just keep it and put it on my e36 (I have some adapters from a Polish company called K-System Pro for that application too)
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Originally posted by Nate047 View PostFair warning, VBT does not ship to the US currently, full stop... I had to ship the parts to my friend in Germany who then turned around and shipped them to me. It was definitely not economical in the long run, but whatever. This car has been one giant financial snowball after another so does it really even matter? Live and learn. I bought some used calipers separately, which also for the record was the wrong choice. In total it will cost me a couple hundred bucks more to rebuild and powdercoat the calipers, including new pins and clips, dust boots, bleeders, and cross over pipes. I should have just bought the full kit including rebuilt calipers from VBT.
I'm doing DB9 fronts with 345mm rotors and 996 rears. My car is an early MK20 ABS car, which also has a different master cylinder, so the stock brake bias is more towards the rear than on later cars.
So according to my ricer math, the early master cyl plus the combo of 996 rears and the DB9 front 40/44mm piston pairing should be a little better than the 40/40mm pistons of the Megane, moving the bias forward and closer to the ballpark of a stock CSL brake bias. And in theory these will be a little better for tapered pad wear also. Still use the same D1001 pads. The DB9 calipers weigh about .5lb more each than the Megane caliper.
I might sell the Freakyparts kit, but I may just keep it and put it on my e36 (I have some adapters from a Polish company called K-System Pro for that application too)
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Originally posted by Nate047 View PostFair warning, VBT does not ship to the US currently, full stop... I had to ship the parts to my friend in Germany who then turned around and shipped them to me. It was definitely not economical in the long run, but whatever. This car has been one giant financial snowball after another so does it really even matter? Live and learn. I bought some used calipers separately, which also for the record was the wrong choice. In total it will cost me a couple hundred bucks more to rebuild and powdercoat the calipers, including new pins and clips, dust boots, bleeders, and cross over pipes. I should have just bought the full kit including rebuilt calipers from VBT.
I'm doing DB9 fronts with 345mm rotors and 996 rears. My car is an early MK20 ABS car, which also has a different master cylinder, so the stock brake bias is more towards the rear than on later cars.
So according to my ricer math, the early master cyl plus the combo of 996 rears and the DB9 front 40/44mm piston pairing should be a little better than the 40/40mm pistons of the Megane, moving the bias forward and closer to the ballpark of a stock CSL brake bias. And in theory these will be a little better for tapered pad wear also. Still use the same D1001 pads. The DB9 calipers weigh about .5lb more each than the Megane caliper.
I might sell the Freakyparts kit, but I may just keep it and put it on my e36 (I have some adapters from a Polish company called K-System Pro for that application too)2003.5 MT JB/B - CSL SCHRICK SUPERSPRINT EISENMANN JRZ SWIFT MILLWAY APR ENDLESS BBS/SSR DREXLER KMP SACHS RECARO AR SLON MKRS GSP DMG KARBONIUS CP AUTOSOLUTIONS KOYO
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Nate, it depends what you are building for and how your car is set up and how you want it to behave. It is a system and everything impacts everything.
For example, if your car is gutted from midpoint rearward, your weight distribution will be closer to 52-54% front (similarly if you want to run flat ride with "softly" sprung front where you xfer a tonne of weight forward under heavy braking). You probably don't want a brake setup that shifts brake bias rearward ala 996 kit (which I keep reminding people comes from mid/rear engines car) or ZCP/CSL kit. Unless you adjust the rake (more negative) and run rear lower to give rear end more weight distribution and add some rear grip under braking. But then you might understeer coming out of the corners on early throttle application. Or maybe you have a wing which adds dynamic force and grip to the rear, then a brake setup that moves bias rearward makes sense. Or maybe you have different spring rates or adjustment knobs to play with.
That unsprung weight difference will be noticeable chucking it into corners. I am not saying lighter setup is better necessarily.
I've had to play around quite a bit with brakes and suspension and when changing either, or removing weight from the car it impacts the other. Everything is dynamic. Pi r^2 on caliper pistons, rotor diameters, pad mu variables are good to ballpark on paper to see directionally what might change, but application to your setup and you as a driver will feel different the first time you come to a hard braking zone that is downward sloping and things get surprisingly loose. You can adjust your driving style or you can go back to the equations and crunch what suspension or brake setup changes (or maybe removing all that weight in the rear was not a good idea) to give you directionality on what to try changing next in your setup.
The simple answer is always very clear, everyone should run AP kit, "the best". The complicated answer that everyone hates, is it depends. You start doing track, and jam on the brake pedal at every turn and think you are booking it and you need a bbk because your pads burn up. Upgrade pads and cooling. You will also learn as you develop as a driver that whereas at beginning you used to jam the brakes at every turn, now you are more advanced and only need to brake on 3 turns instead of 10, you can tap on others to xfer weight and help with rotation, etc. Things start lasting longer naturally. Those huge upgrades you thought you needed, you can now maybe even downgrade.
Obviously for upgrades for bling factor over function, like all my posts, my post can be ignored.
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Last edited by mrgizmo04; 05-18-2023, 07:34 AM.Youtube DIYs and more
All jobs done as diy - clutch, rod bearings, rear subframe rebush, vanos, headers, cooling, suspension, etc.
PM for help in NorCal. Have a lot of specialty tools - vanos, pilot bearing puller, bushing press kit, valve adjustment, fcab, wheel bearing, engine support bar, etc.
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Originally posted by mrgizmo04 View PostNate, it depends what you are building for and how your car is set up and how you want it to behave. It is a system and everything impacts everything.
For example, if your car is gutted from midpoint rearward, your weight distribution will be closer to 52-54% front (similarly if you want to run flat ride with "softly" sprung front where you xfer a tonne of weight forward under heavy braking). You probably don't want a brake setup that shifts brake bias rearward ala 996 kit (which I keep reminding people comes from mid/rear engines car) or ZCP/CSL kit. Unless you adjust the rake (more negative) and run rear lower to give rear end more weight distribution and add some rear grip under braking. But then you might understeer coming out of the corners on early throttle application. Or maybe you have a wing which adds dynamic force and grip to the rear, then a brake setup that moves bias rearward makes sense. Or maybe you have different spring rates or adjustment knobs to play with.
That unsprung weight difference will be noticeable chucking it into corners. I am not saying lighter setup is better necessarily.
I've had to play around quite a bit with brakes and suspension and when changing either, or removing weight from the car it impacts the other. Everything is dynamic. Pi r^2 on caliper pistons, rotor diameters, pad mu variables are good to ballpark on paper to see directionally what might change, but application to your setup and you as a driver will feel different the first time you come to a hard braking zone that is downward sloping and things get surprisingly loose. You can adjust your driving style or you can go back to the equations and crunch what suspension or brake setup changes (or maybe removing all that weight in the rear was not a good idea) to give you directionality on what to try changing next in your setup.
The simple answer is always very clear, everyone should run AP kit, "the best". The complicated answer that everyone hates, is it depends. You start doing track, and jam on the brake pedal at every turn and think you are booking it and you need a bbk because your pads burn up. Upgrade pads and cooling. You will also learn as you develop as a driver that whereas at beginning you used to jam the brakes at every turn, now you are more advanced and only need to brake on 3 turns instead of 10, you can tap on others to xfer weight and help with rotation, etc. Things start lasting longer naturally. Those huge upgrades you thought you needed, you can now maybe even downgrade.
Obviously for upgrades for bling factor over function, like all my posts, my post can be ignored.
Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk
Here's my thought process on the brake setup I've landed on as a starting point, please let me know if I'm off here or missing some big points. My understanding is that stock for stock, early cars have a more rearward bias than later cars, due to a different master cyl. So I looked at the brake bias numbers various people have come up with for later cars using Megane front calipers with 345mm rotors and 996 rear calipers, which seems to be a happy starting point, and ballparked that the DB9 front calipers with the slightly larger 44/40 pistons and 345mm rotors should kind of counteract the early car rear bias created by the master cyl. Maybe I'm wrong and TBH I am not an equations kind of guy, so if anyone would be willing to run these numbers and see where it actually falls, that would be very interesting and helpful to the greater knowledge bank.
This is my first time building an e46 for track but not my first rodeo with track cars in general, so I know it's not as easy as just throwing parts at the car. Weight wise, I removed the rear seats and gutted the trunk carpet, but I'm adding a rear brace and roll bar, so it's probably going to be a wash. I'm running off the shelf KW Clubsport 2 way adjustables so yes, I will have to test and tune and see how this whole system works together. I'm aware that might not be the ideal damper and spring but it's what I have, so I'm going to run them for now. I also have a GT4 style rear wing and front lip which I will also run because, not gonna lie, they look cool and I want that just as much as actual performance benefits. I'm running 18x10ET25 wheels with NT01 used spares, and I'll end up likely on a 265 200tw tire after those are done. I will also likely end up doing a MK60 retrofit in the not so distant future. But again right now, all of that stuff is just sitting in my garage because I have no time to dedicate to the car.Last edited by Nate047; 05-20-2023, 04:09 PM.
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So I’d check tires and suspension first. Bad tires can work the brakes harder. You’re on the brakes for a longer period to get the car slowed down. Also a poor suspension setup can extend braking distances - more heat.
My car is pretty light - 2630lbs without driver and fuel.
I run the ST40 front and rear BBK. The calipers have dust seals, haven’t been a problem thus far.
I started out with PF01s and then switched to Stoptech SR34s which were PF01 clones but $200 instead of $350 for the PFCs. With cooling, front pads lasted about 10-12 days. The pads were the same front to rear. I kept new pads on the rear and just swap them when the fronts get low.
Also the rotor discs were the same. Over 100 track days, my front rotors are 12 days in and the rear rotors were originally on the front.
I bleed my brakes once a year or if a tech inspection requires one within 6 months. Ive used OEM BMW brake fluid and Motul RBF600.
Never had an issue - 12 years. No brake fade, knock back, or performance issue. The kit has been reliable, low maintenance and low cost. My pad life has increased by about 1-2 days since I’ve installed the roll cage and lightened the car.
I believe Stoptech is having some issues…so I’d be advised before proceeding. It’s been a great balance of performance and cost.
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I present to y'all, the ECS bronze bushings: https://youtube.com/shorts/GdIRm2POlG8
Will this help with taper? We'll see. I just picked up two (yep) sets of rear 996 calipers for a song off marketplace. It's likely I'll pair one of them with a set of Megane fronts at some point, but I'm hoping these ECS bushings at least improve things for the next couple of months of DEs.
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Originally posted by Pklauser View PostI present to y'all, the ECS bronze bushings: https://youtube.com/shorts/GdIRm2POlG8
Will this help with taper? We'll see. I just picked up two (yep) sets of rear 996 calipers for a song off marketplace. It's likely I'll pair one of them with a set of Megane fronts at some point, but I'm hoping these ECS bushings at least improve things for the next couple of months of DEs.
You are waaaaayyyyyyy over analyzing this. Its pretty simple.
If you casually track 3-4 days per year and do it for fun then a BBK might not be worth it.
But this is the way I look at it. Brakes can easily end your weekend. A weekend you spent a lot of time and effort prepping the car, getting to the track, and all of the costs like registration, hotels, fuel, etc. I'd spend the $$$ on a BBK purely for reliability - to know that brakes won't be the cause of ending the weekend early. I go 10/10ths otherwise what's the point? What sucks is having to manage brakes because they fade or you know there's not a lot of pad left.
You can cobble a kit together with parts from other cars or keep throwing all of these parts at your stock brakes that aren't all that great. I'd go with something that you KNOW will work and won't have to F with at the track. Been there...changing out hot brake pads so I don't miss my next session in a paddock where the concrete is 120 degrees, can't even kneel down on it because you'll get a 3rd degree burn.
Just a thought from someone who has been doing this for over 15 years - seen a lot over that time. Seen a lot of students go home early because they ran out of brakes.Last edited by bigjae46; 05-21-2023, 05:02 PM.
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Originally posted by bigjae46 View Post
You will get taper with sliding calipers, no matter what.
You are waaaaayyyyyyy over analyzing this. Its pretty simple.
If you casually track 3-4 days per year and do it for fun then a BBK might not be worth it.
But this is the way I look at it. Brakes can easily end your weekend. A weekend you spent a lot of time and effort prepping the car, getting to the track, and all of the costs like registration, hotels, fuel, etc. I'd spend the $$$ on a BBK purely for reliability - to know that brakes won't be the cause of ending the weekend early. I go 10/10ths otherwise what's the point? What sucks is having to manage brakes because they fade or you know there's not a lot of pad left.
You can cobble a kit together with parts from other cars or keep throwing all of these parts at your stock brakes that aren't all that great. I'd go with something that you KNOW will work and won't have to F with at the track. Been there...changing out hot brake pads so I don't miss my next session in a paddock where the concrete is 120 degrees, can't even kneel down on it because you'll get a 3rd degree burn.
Just a thought from someone who has been doing this for over 15 years - seen a lot over that time. Seen a lot of students go home early because they ran out of brakes.
I think there's value in exploring lower-cost solutions. I understand that it's not for everyone, and there's a chance I end up with a pricier kit in the end, but with kits like your StopTech seeing such significant price increases in the last year or so, along with FCP's lifetime replacement pads/rotors, the economics have changed and I like exploring the options 😄
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