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Strange thing about Monday's
Hi Kevin - Sorry about that... Monday's are either very quiet (with Jim playing card games on the PC bored stiff) *OR* crazy on fire. Today happened to be the crazy on fire Monday - Jim was totally overwhelmed = sorry that you couldn't get through appropriately. I saw your e-mail that you sent in, and forwarded it to Jim with instructions to give you a jingle. Is there a best time for you to take a call? Please note that Jim is only in the office from 10am to 3pm CST (live local time clock on our contact us web page).
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All good info.....
I have a couple (3 and building a 4th) race cars.... ran Thunderhill this weekend - Wilwood 1" MANUAL master cylinder... Wilwood 6 piston front - 4 piston rears..... I'm running down into turn one at 135 to 140 mph..... and then have 14 more turns to negotiate after that - lap after lap. Never needed anything other than my foot and I can stand the car on it's nose... I don't even run an aggressive pad. I prefer to buy cheap pads over Spec 37 rotors. I have the bias set so when I'm threshold braking -- I know I've hit that point when the rears chatter (hop) and the ass is in the air and the nose is digging a hole - that way I know to let up just a bit.... it's a "telltale". |
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The street is a different ball game. Cold pads and way less friction. |
Rule out your issues - install the other MC you have on hand
I do actually indeed suggest that you pop the other MC in to see what happens. It's already sitting there, so why not try it? I am a mega gearhead, and would definitely install the alternate MC myself to see what may happen before moving forward with anything else, especially as easy as it is to do a back to back MC swap out (providing you don't have to get into brake line port adapters or any changes with the brake lines).
TIP: Absolutely positively thoroughly bench bleed the MC first (off of the car literally in a bench vise, of course, right?) - view the links below. I strongly suggest the port plug method as opposed to the old school hose method for MC bench bleeding (it's vastly more conclusive than the hose method). Once that is done: Air does not go down brake lines when a MC is disconnected. As such, place a big fat towel underneath the MC to catch the brake fluid, disconnect the lines from your current MC, cap the brake lines with some generic vacuum caps for the moment. Yank the (dripping) current MC out (plug the ports quickly if possible to prevent the mess). Bolt the new MC in with the bleeding port plugs still in place. Now yank the little vacuum caps off of the brake lines and plug them into the new MC as quickly as you can, BUT do not tighten them down all of the way. Why? If you wait for both loosely connected lines to start steadily dripping, this has bled this part of the braking system out, not requiring you to get into a full on four wheel brake bleed session again (unless you believe there could be air still strapped somewhere in the system). http://hydratechbraking.com/braketech1.html http://www.hydratechbraking.com//ima...BleedSheet.JPG Let us know how the alternate MC behaves - we're all here to help! :military: |
Major differences...
Street braking versus road course / track braking are definitely very very different scenarios. Track only / mostly? Fits Greg Welds comments, thoughts, and suggestions. Street use? That's a whole different world. Scrubbing off high speeds - say 150 down to 90 for a turn speaks more of the thermal capacity of the brakes. Street braking from 70 to zero is significantly different arena speaking much more so of instant clamping force available.
Here is a fun video: Super Chevy Magazine exclaims, "In our history of vehicle testing, we have never had a car stop in this short of a distance!" https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_c...&v=CpUy9wcAtJY http://www.classicperform.com/Projec...rojectNova.htm |
Paul what is the main difference between yours and CPP's Hydra stop? Thanks
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