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Porsche Brembo 996 BBK Conversion-- let's figure out how to fix the dust boots/seals
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Same, Dave made sure that I received the correct high temperature gray (Stoptech branded) vs "regular" black (Centric branded) ones, even though Centric is parent of Stoptech.
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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 Casa de Mesa View PostYou might want to try reaching out to Essex. They aren't a Brembo dealer, but are in the industry and a great bunch of guys.
Heck I may call them later if my day frees up.
High Temperature, Low Drag Seals Without Dust Boots
We are often asked by potential customers if the calipers in our kits require frequent maintenance and rebuilding because the pistons don't have dust boots. We are perpetually shocked by this question because it makes no intuitive sense. If you have a product that is specifically designed to handle the extraordinary high-heat conditions of track use, why would it require more maintenance when used under those conditions vs. brake components that were designed to cruise around on the streets at low speed and temperature?
Many people confuse piston seals with dust boots. All calipers have seals. They're the little rubbery rings inside the piston bores (see pic below). If a caliper didn't have a seal, your brake fluid would leak out around the pistons! OEM caliper seals aren’t designed to handle constant trips to several hundred degrees without becoming brittle and leaking. Our calipers use special high-temp seals designed for track use. They are the exact same high temperature seals used in NASCAR Sprint Cup, ALMS, DTM, etc. That means they are less likely to get brittle and wear out when used under high-heat track conditions, and they require far LESS frequent replacement and servicing.
Most aftermarket calipers are designed for year round road use, and as such come with a bellows style external dust boot like the ones shown below. The rubber boot stretches as the piston extends, and its objective is to keep contaminants out of the piston bore. It's a nice concept, but we've seen customers burn those up in a single 20 minute track session! Once that happens, you're simply driving around with some tattered, burnt rubber bits attached to your pistons. At that point they're providing zero benefits to you. If you're going to instantly destroy them when you go to the track, why worry about having them in the first place? We skip making that mess for you by eliminating them from our design.
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Originally posted by Slideways View PostI want to say that the last few 996/7s I saw at the track had aftermarket BBKs on them. It seems a little ridiculous to expect heavy track use out of a caliper designed for a street application.
Has composition and formulation of the materials changed vs 5-10 years ago so they don't last as long now? Possible.
One of the inherent problems with 996 kits that folks forget about that gets lost among some "benefits" like "lighter", "pedal feel", is that they were originally on cars lighter than ours and with rear bias. So rear pads actually add significant size upgrade to deal with heat vs stock m3 pads (few pics below). For front bias cars like ours, 996 fronts just don't provide enough heat capacity (+ inefficient rotor cooling setup as I discussed before). I shove as much air as possible into the rotor, but that semi floating hat just deflects most of it back. Not surprising that newer m3 gen guys switch brake kits with similar style semi floating rotors to expensive kits. I think simply a proper rotor would go a long way to evacuate the heat. But swiss cheese rotors were all the rage.
Sent from my SM-S911U1 using Tapatalk
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 Epsilon View Post
They are a very helpful bunch though and might have ideas, was my thought. Even if they are anti dust boot 😛Build thread: Topaz Blue to Shark Blue
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In terms of rebuilding the calipers frequently...
If Girodisc pressure seals hold up (I'll remove some dust boots to see if I find shavings like with stoptech ones pictured above), then they should be good and I'll be a happy camper. Because replacing the pressure seals gets messy with all the fluid.
If I keep playing musical chairs with dust boots between Girodisc, FCP Brembo, etc, that's not that terrible as they can be swapped with caliper and fluid line connected to the car (in worst cases at least the fluid line and pistons don't need to be removed and nothing gets messy with fluid everywhere).
If someone is trying the magical blue dust boots, report back, assuming that's the only variable you change.
Sent from my SM-S911U1 using Tapatalk
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 Postassuming that's the only variable you change.2002 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
2012 Alpinweiss 128i - Coupe - 6AT - Slicktop - Manual Seats - Daily - Journal
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Originally posted by heinzboehmer View PostWas just talking to some local people about heat management with these calipers the other day. The stock noise isolators that stick to the pads are made of what appears to be steel with a rubber coating. Bry5on ran the math and found that a heat shield made of 0.1mm elastomer and 1mm steel would result in the same thermal conductivity as 1mm of titanium. Any thicker on the elastomer and it outperforms Ti.
Point of this is that the calipers are designed to have those isolators installed. Heat getting to the dust boots is probably much higher without them. The problem is likely extra bad with track pads, as most of them have a backing plate made of just steel and lack that HDPE-like layer that street pads like textars have on them. I know that layer is probably mostly on there for noise, but it should make a pretty big difference regarding heat transfer as well.
My plan is to use the OE Porsche/Brembo dust boots and a heat shield. Haven't decided yet if I want to run the titanium shims or the stock Porsche ones with the metal cylinders removed (pic below). Will likely buy the Ti stuff and run a quick experiment to see which one does a better job at track temps.
I know this didn't answer your question, but I figured I'd share, as less heat there should help prolong the life of the seals.
These are the appropriate dust boots:
- https://www.fcpeuro.com/products/por...or-95135191700
- https://www.fcpeuro.com/products/por...or-95135191701
- https://www.fcpeuro.com/products/por...or-95135291700
- https://www.fcpeuro.com/products/por...or-95135291701
2005 IR/IR M3 Coupe
2012 LMB/Black 128i
2008 Black/Black M5 Sedan
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Your difference in experiences with the factory rotor vs your Brembo BBK is interesting. I'm assuming you had a 355x32 kit, and while I don't have the weights of a Brembo ring, the GiroDisc 355x32 ring weighs in at around 17 lbs. The GiroDisc E46 M3 ring (ring only) weighs in at around 16 lbs, so the thermal mass is very similar. This passes my sniff test, because while the D1-012 factory-sized ring is 345x28, it has at least 10mm more annulus which makes it up. I don't have a recorded weight for the factory ring only, because we would have to cut the co-cast "hat" out...
Both the Brembo 355x32 ring and the GiroDisc 355x32 ring (and the E46 M3 ring) are 48-vane count. The factory rotor has 30 vanes, if my notes are correct. So the Brembo rotor would have more than 50% higher vane count, which lends itself to much more effective cooling. Brembo has also sold a 72-vane 355x32 (I think they call it Type 5) but I would suspect the ring in your kit was 48-vane.
tl;dr: it makes sense that your Brembo BBK was much more effective at cooling than the factory rotors, which matches your real-life experience. The factory rotors suck at cooling, relatively speaking.
Dust boots get toasted with track use, even the boots in my 997.2 GT3 with the 380mm setup (more than enough rotor for the car) are beyond disintegrated. Titanium pad shields will help, but at the end of the day the most robust boots are the EPDM units. The "high-temp" stuff is silicone if I remember correctly and tend to be fragile as heck.Last edited by r4dr; 08-18-2023, 05:36 PM.'03.5 M3 SMG Coupe - Jet Black / Black
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Originally posted by r4dr View Post
Brembo, GiroDisc, and I believe Pat's seals/boots are all EDPM.
As far as I know, Brembo uses the same parts bin of seals and boots for their OEM calipers and BBK calipers.
Sent from my SM-S911U1 using Tapatalk
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.
Comment
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Originally posted by r4dr View PostYour difference in experiences with the factory rotor vs your Brembo BBK is interesting. I'm assuming you had a 355x32 kit, and while I don't have the weights of a Brembo ring, the GiroDisc 355x32 ring weighs in at around 17 lbs. The GiroDisc E46 M3 ring (ring only) weighs in at around 16 lbs, so the thermal mass is very similar. This passes my sniff test, because while the D1-012 factory-sized ring is 345x28, it has at least 10mm more annulus which makes it up. I don't have a recorded weight for the factory ring only, because we would have to cut the co-cast "hat" out...
Both the Brembo 355x32 ring and the GiroDisc 355x32 ring (and the E46 M3 ring) are 48-vane count. The factory rotor has 30 vanes, if my notes are correct. So the Brembo rotor would have more than 50% higher vane count, which lends itself to much more effective cooling. Brembo has also sold a 72-vane 355x32 (I think they call it Type 5) but I would suspect the ring in your kit was 48-vane.
tl;dr: it makes sense that your Brembo BBK was much more effective at cooling than the factory rotors, which matches your real-life experience. The factory rotors suck at cooling, relatively speaking.
Dust boots get toasted with track use, even the boots in my 997.2 GT3 with the 380mm setup (more than enough rotor for the car) are beyond disintegrated. Titanium pad shields will help, but at the end of the day the most robust boots are the EPDM units. The "high-temp" stuff is silicone if I remember correctly and tend to be fragile as heck.
2005 IR/IR M3 Coupe
2012 LMB/Black 128i
2008 Black/Black M5 Sedan
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Originally posted by mrgizmo04 View PostGirodisc dustboots seem to be holding up to temp after a few events (need to run a few more events to confirm), but as I posted in one of the pics above, they slide out of the bores (stay attached to pistons and get pulled out).
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Originally posted by Obioban View Post
Doing some reading this morning, it seems silicon can deal with heat significantly better than EPDM. Other than install potentially being a PITA, what issues are your foreseeing in the high temp silicon stuff being fragile?'03.5 M3 SMG Coupe - Jet Black / Black
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Originally posted by r4dr View PostIf I remember correctly, the silicone is not impervious to brake fluid. If you manage to get them installed, I'd be curious how much of a difference they would make in your scenario.
I’m debating what combination of them and titanium heat shields I should try…
2005 IR/IR M3 Coupe
2012 LMB/Black 128i
2008 Black/Black M5 Sedan
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