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Old 07-28-2013, 06:46 PM
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Dave,

You didn't give me all the details to work with, so I "assumed" a 6-1 pedal ratio & worked up a chart with 13" rotors & 14" rotors. If you have different details, let me know what they are & I'll plug them into my calcs.

Also, since I don't know what pads you're going to run, I adjusted the pad CoF until I got the 14" rotor version to about 4000# braking force. That will require pads in the .52 CoF at the temperature range you'll use them at. That is the lower end of race pads. You may want less braking force on the street.

For less braking force, go to a pad with a lower CoF. For more braking force, go higher on the CoF.

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Old 07-28-2013, 10:28 PM
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Thanks Ron.

Yes, 6:1 on the pedal ratio and 14" front and rear rotors.

I need to see if I can get an exact number/model # of the brake pads I got. I was also considering going with Carbotech XP-12 and/or XP-10 pads. I used them on my previous Wilwood setup (XP-10 front / XP-8 rear) and liked them.

Any experience with them?
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Old 07-29-2013, 08:19 AM
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Josh (Banko) has an award from Wilwood, so he's upgrading his brakes. Josh is the one that started this thread because his car is not braking strong enough. He PM'd me the system he's considering.

Brake piston sizes
Front: W6A (1.75,1.38,1.38)
Rear: C6Zo6 (1.3,1.3,1.3)

Rotor diameters
Front: 14"
Rear: 14"

pedal ratio
6.25:1

Master cylinder bores
Front: 0.75"
Rear: 0.75" or 0.875"
Brake pad brand & compound name
Front: PolyMatrix H
Rear: Hawk HPS

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

I ran the calcs on this system ... an whoa Baby ... it swings the pendulum too far the other way. In the chart below, this is the system on the left. Look down at the total braking force #. It would have 7000# of braking force, which would simply lock the wheels up upon braking.

Now look at the chart on the right. By changing the pad compounds & the M/C sizes, we adjust the total braking force to about 4000#. That is a strong braking system.

Did you guys ever watch the Lassie TV show?
If you did, you remember the Dad always sat down with Timmy at the end of the show to explain the moral of their lesson. This was a planned in moment every show. The writers called it the "Ya know Timmy ..." part of the story.

Well ... Ya know Timmy ...
The lesson here is when building your braking system working out the details is just as important as buying great parts.


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Old 07-28-2013, 10:51 PM
67goatman455 67goatman455 is offline
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I'm still completely baffled that the brakes on my 99' Trans Am are better than a C6 Z06. Would the braking force be atleast somewhat equal to the LS1 calipers compared to the Z06 after having the "appropriate/OE spec" master cylinder bores, boost assist, and pedal ratio etc?
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Old 07-29-2013, 08:27 AM
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Hi Scott,

My concern is you're coming to a conclusion about braking systems, looking only at one part of the system ... the caliper piston area. Frankly, that's why many brake & pad manufacturers don't release specs. They're concerned a little information ... without the whole picture ... can lead to bad brake choices & incorrectly operating brake systems.


Quote:
Originally Posted by 67goatman455 View Post
I'm still completely baffled that the brakes on my 99' Trans Am are better than a C6 Z06.
That's not accurate. Just the piston size on the calipers are smaller in the C6 Z06. But the pedal ratio, rotor diameter, brake compound all make the total C6 Z06 brake package have slightly more braking force than the '99 Trans Am.

Would the braking force be at least somewhat equal to the LS1 calipers compared to the Z06 after having the "appropriate/OE spec" master cylinder bores, boost assist, and pedal ratio etc?
As covered above, the C6 Z06 Brake system has slightly more braking force than the '99 Trans Am. The GM engineers just got there another route than caliper piston area.

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Old 07-29-2013, 11:00 AM
67goatman455 67goatman455 is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ron Sutton View Post
[COLOR="Blue"]Hi Scott,

My concern is you're coming to a conclusion about braking systems, looking only at one part of the system ... the caliper piston area.
that would be correct.
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Old 07-29-2013, 12:23 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 67goatman455 View Post
that would be correct.

For me personally, I prefer to build brake systems with more caliper piston area than the PBR/Z06 Calipers utilize, because I don't want to have to get so aggressive with rotor size & pad compound to get the desired braking force.

But they make it work quite well.

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Old 07-29-2013, 12:26 PM
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Scott asked this in a separate post & I answered it there ... but felt it should be included in this thread too.

Quote:
Originally Posted by 67goatman455 View Post
Wondering what the advantages/disadvantages are to the different types of rotors. Plain rotors seem to be cheaper when you need to replace them and there would be a higher surface area i assume. But i can see the slotted/drilled keeping the rotors and pads cooler to help brake fade.

Hey Scott,

I'll outline my thoughts on the pros & cons of different brake rotor features & everyone can decide for themselves what makes sense for their individual needs. I think if you ask 5 different brake experts you will get 7 different opinions, so decide yourself & go with what makes sense for your goals.


Drilled: In the early years, before we knew better, many racers thought that drilling rotors made them run cooler. Wrong. Brake experts had rotors drilled to give the brake pads boundary layer of gasses a path to escape, while the edges of the holes helped clean the pads of debris somewhat.

For a rotor to deal with the heat generated, having more “mass” increases its thermal capacity. Drilling a bunch of holes in the rotor reduces the rotor’s mass & reduces the thermal capacity of the rotor. If the rotor gets overheated often & for long periods of time … the drilled holes become "stress raisers" that can lead to three problems: Elongation and/or distortion of the rotor, cracks between the holes … and breakage. Drilled rotors still have their place. I’ll explain at the end.

Slotted/Grooved: The grooves in the rotor … often called slots … help "clean" the debris from the brake pad. That’s it. It’s a good thing. The grooves/slots need to run a specific direction. See the illustration below.

J-Hooks: AP brakes offers a neat rotor a lot of road race & short track oval guys use. Instead of a straight slot grooved into the rotor, they have these “J”s machined into the rotor surface. The “J” goes all the way through the rotor, unlike grooved slots. The perform the same function as a slot and “maybe” they’re helping the boundary layer of gasses to escape. See them HERE.

Cooling: is not achieved with slots or drilled holes. There are three ways to cool rotors: Vanes inside the rotor, air ducting, with or without fans, to blow cooler air on the rotor, and the Ultra Cool brake fans that mount on the hub. See them HERE.

Important: I learned long ago, if we cool the rotor optimally, we can run a little less mass in the rotor ... so it's lighter. For this advantage ... I make cooling the rotors a serious priority. I don’t want to provide the rotors “a little cooling” … I want to provide “as much cooling as practically possible” so we can run lighter rotors & reduce that rotating mass.

Vanes: Are the most important cooling feature of the rotor itself. The vanes of the rotor … spinning on the hub axis … create a vortex, sucking air into & through the rotor’s vanes … helping to cool the rotor. These are simply referred to as vaned rotors & they come in a lot of configurations. The details matter here. The air travels from inside the rotor to the outside, not the other way around as is commonly thought. So the vanes must face rearward when viewed from the outer diameter of the rotor.

Straight vanes do not work as well as curved vanes. There are made & sold as an economy product, because they can go on either side & the parts store doesn’t need to stock left & ride side rotors.

Curved vanes
are the way to go. Just think of fan blade design. The vanes scoop the air from inside the rotor … suck it through the inside of the rotor … cooling both sides … and out the top.

More curved vanes provide more cooling … and add mass (weight) to increase the rotor’s thermal capacity. This is my preference instead of adding diameter. If we can get a 12” rotor with 48 vanes that weighs around 11# … that would be my preference over a 13” rotor with 32-36 vanes that also weighs around 11# … because the thermal capacity is the same, the 48 vanes cool better & the 12” rotor has the mass closer into the center, so it’s easier to accelerate & decelerate it.

The only advantage the 13” rotor offered (besides cool looks inside the big wheel) is 10% more braking force. But I can get that 10% braking force four other ways (pad, pedal, piston size & M/C size) … and not have the disadvantage of that weight rotating so far out there. A .05 CoF change in brake pad compound can achieve that.

Note: The vaned rotor is shooting hot air onto the inside of the wheel surface. This is where some of the tire’s heat comes from. If the brakes are overheating, this may over heat the tires too. (Seen it MANY times). Another reason to cool the brakes better.

Rotor Width: Making a vaned rotor wider adds several things: More weight & thermal capacity … and better cooling because the vane channels are bigger, flowing more air. Typical rotor widths are .81”, 1.0” 1.1”, 1.25” & 1.38”. Of course you have to have calipers capable of working on the wider rotor. I like to use the wider option as it adds minimal flywheel effect … as compared to adding rotor diameter.

If you’re not familiar with the math …
Changing the weight of a rotating mass is a one-for-one change in “stored energy” … which I think of, and call, “the flywheel effect.” Moving the weight of a rotating mass increases the stored energy by the SQUARE of the radius change. OMG! This is because as you move weight OUT from its rotating axis, you are increasing the weight's circular velocity (speed).

On the track where speeds are up significantly higher … than everyday passenger car speeds … it really matters. The faster we spin a rotating weight, the more energy it stores (flywheel effect). If we double the RPM of a rotating weight, we multiply the stored energy four times. So at twice the speed … say going into a corner at 100 mph instead of 50 mph … everything rotating has four times the flywheel effect. This is why it’s key to have lighter tire & wheel combos & not run larger or heavier rotors than we really need. My belief is to run as large as I need for thermal capacity & no more.

Rotor Diameter: A larger rotor diameter adds several things: Increased braking force, potentially more weight & thermal capacity, increased flywheel effect of moving the weight out from the centerline ... oh, and the cool factor.

Let’s outline braking force gains first:
Going from 10” to 11” adds 12.5% braking force
Going from 11” to 12” adds 11.1% braking force
Going from 12” to 13” adds 10.0% braking force
Going from 13” to 14” adds 9.1% braking force

Why I said potentially increases weight & thermal capacity … is because rotor designs vary. It’s possible to have an 11# 12” rotor & an 11# 13” rotor. If that is the case, you didn’t gain mass (weight) or thermal capacity. But, you still moved the weight OUT & increased the flywheel effect. Of course it is probable that you increased the mass (weight) & thermal capacity … as most 13” rotors are heavily than the same design 12” rotor … typically in the 3-6# range. So then, not only did you move the weight OUT & increase the flywheel effect … you added weight to the flywheel effect. UGLY!

I exhaust every option BEFORE I go larger on diameter. I go more aggressive pad compound, wider rotor, curved vanes, more vanes, better rotor material, no drilled holes and lastly more rotor material. Then, if I still need more thermal capacity than that … think GT/Trans Am road race cars … by all means I’m going up in rotor diameter.

.
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Last edited by Ron Sutton; 08-05-2013 at 06:07 AM.
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Old 07-29-2013, 04:22 PM
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Ron, thanks so much for running the numbers, I appreciate you showing me that every little detail matters in the system.



If I have a goal of running Wilwood J or H on the track and E's on the Auto-x / street can I do the following: 0.875" bore on the front, 0.875" bore on the rear dropping the line pressure via my existing proportioning valve to what a 1.0" bore would provide?

I'm running the Wilwood high volume master cylinders that run in (0.75", 0.875", and 1.0" bores, no 13/16" available). I have a duplicate set of 0.875" bore master cylinders and would like to put them to use instead of buying another new MC.

So the system would be:

Scenario 1: Street / Auto-x

Brake piston sizes (all)
Front: W6A (1.75,1.38,1.38)
Rear: C6Zo6 (1.3,1.3,1.3)

Rotor diameters
Front: 14"
Rear: 14"

pedal ratio
6.25:1

Master cylinder bores
Front: 0.875"
Rear: 1.0" (via 0.875" MC + proportioning valve)

Brake pad brand & compound name
Front: PolyMatrix E
Rear: Hawk HP+

Scenario 2: Track Only

Brake piston sizes (all)
Front: W6A (1.75,1.38,1.38)
Rear: C6Zo6 (1.3,1.3,1.3)

Rotor diameters
Front: 14"
Rear: 14"

pedal ratio
6.25:1

Master cylinder bores
Front: 0.875"
Rear: 1.0" (via 0.875" MC + proportioning valve)

Brake pad brand & compound name
Front: PolyMatrix J or H
Rear: Hawk HP+
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