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| Tracking / Autocross / HPDE / Drifting What these cars were built for! |
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#29 | |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to CSG Mike For This Useful Post: | Kelse92 (07-05-2022) |
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#30 |
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#31 | |
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My question is, if 2 cars are equal, one novice driver brakes before 500' and the other less novicey driver brakes at 350' who's brakes will last longer? |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to blsfrs For This Useful Post: | timurrrr (07-08-2022) |
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#32 | |
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However, the instructor's goal wasn't to make brakes last longer, but to boil down information into just a simple bite for novices. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to CSG Mike For This Useful Post: | timurrrr (07-08-2022) |
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#33 | |
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I agree too, simple bites for novices since building driving skill and knowledge is a gradual process. |
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#34 | |
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The energy isn't changing, only the application. The reason the longer brake is easier is because heat takes time to conduct. Lower heat impulse is less thermal shock. The shorter the time spent on the brakes, the larger the thermal gradient. An extra second of brake cooling isn't going to make a difference in equilibrium temps; the brakes are cooling the entire time as the temperature differential between rotor and ambient is always there. |
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#35 |
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I went back and read the linked brake pad thread end to end. Also read the CSG review thread. Between those two and this one I have learned a massive amount. One thing that is still escaping me is the big brake kits. I saw a post from someone saying he does not want to spend much on pads and CSG Mike I think recommended BBK.
So a big brake kit would eat less of its own pad compared to the same compound on a stock caliper given the exact same deceleration, car, temp, pedal application? Is this due to larger pad and rotor surface providing more material for friction and everything being larger cooling faster since the heat energy built up in the system dur to braking should be identical? |
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#36 | |
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Is there a "3-second hold on the TC off button" mode like on the 1st gen? If there is you should definitely try it. FWIW I run CSG C2 pads on the street between track events that are within a few weeks apart. A bit noisy but liveable and not ridic dusty. Great pads with great bite at the track and last a frankly unbelievably long time. Like 12+ track days. With big Brembo brakes anyway... |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to ZDan For This Useful Post: | Tokay444 (07-06-2022) |
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#37 |
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#38 | |
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The trade off is more weight, and more up-front cost, and, potentially some wheel fitment challenges. But, that's what the CSG Brembo BM4 kit is for. It fits both the 22+ BRZ and GR86 (most kits only fit GR86), and uses a common rotor (Brembo PP shares rotors.... but the CSG Brembo kit was out before the PP was a thing... how funny). |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to CSG Mike For This Useful Post: | blsfrs (07-06-2022) |
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#39 | |
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Edit: According to CSG web site they do. Last edited by andyk5; 07-07-2022 at 02:32 AM. |
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#40 |
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Depends.... which stock wheels? There are several stock wheels for the GR86.
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#41 | ||
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in the braking application/ driving habits standpoint, there are a couple theories and here is mine: Braking harder and shorter puts greater heat into the rotors, but is easier on the pads and reduces pad wear and fluid temps. The brake pads have some finite "insulation" value as the friction material rejects heat buildup by nature and attempts to keep the heat in the rotor. BUT... a longer, softer brake application squeezes the pads on the rotor longer, which forces more heat into the pads-->pistons-->caliper-->fluid. This causes higher brake fluid temps and greater pad wear. Thus, a short, HARD application of the brakes keeps the heat in the rotors and out of the pads. I cannot explain the proper physics behind it, but that's what I've seen and experienced in >20 yrs of doing HPDEs and racing. Real-world example: my kids both race go karts. Both race the same class and are in the same chassis... Within 5lb overall weight, same engine, tires, brakes, weight distribution, alignment, etc. Their fastest times each day are both within 0.25 sec. Thus everything is pretty much identical but the driving technique. My daughter brakes very late and very hard- straightline threshold braking nearly every time. The pads last half a season on her kart- maybe 15-20 race weekends although I've stopped counting hers and just watch the pads and replace when necessary. I wind up changing hers about once a season. My boy brakes early and soft, and drags the brakes almost to the apex then accelerates out. He gets roughly 3-4 race weekends out of his pads. He also trashes front tires with understeer while the girl wears the rears more. ---Back to cars--- I have experienced the same on track with our endurance racing team. The guys that try to be "easy on the brakes" wind up with cooked brakes before the end of their session and the front tires take a beating as they drag the brakes into the turns, overworking the outer front tire. The veteran racers on the team do a quick stab of the brakes to slow the car then get off them, and we stay within the grip limits of the tires. faster lap times and less wear on both the tires and brakes. Sooooo to answer your question, the guys that keep their foot of the slow pedal the longest will have longer brake pad life *assuming they're running same lap times* as the guys dragging the brakes over longer distances. |
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#42 | |
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__________________
"Experience is the hardest kind of teacher. It gives you the test first and the lesson afterward." -Oscar Wilde.
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| The Following User Says Thank You to NoHaveMSG For This Useful Post: | blsfrs (07-07-2022) |
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