Quote:
Originally Posted by GregWeld
I read thru this -- didn't really find any particular nugget of info to hang a hat on... such as 60/40 or whatever....
What I did find --- was a mindset.... which is --- Race cars with race tires are to be thought of differently than street cars with street tires. Important only because a lot of the things we hear and base info off of may be "street" info rather than "race" info. The math used alone is almost DOUBLE using the sticky race tire with a coefficient of 1.5 versus the street tire of .08 makes a huge difference in what the tires can handle and their stopping distances.
Weight bias - front to rear - and more importantly weight TRANSFER under braking... I know my Mustang doesn't nose dive like my street cars do... etc.
http://www.stoptech.com/technical-su...alance-matters
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Funny Greg, that nugget your looking for is to truly not take anything for granted. Don't assume anything, just because parts are new, no guarantees that they will work properly. I still say the setup I was running should have been at least been in the ball park, the new master was just defective.
Instead of taking the extra day or two to check everything, my A.D.D. once again got the better of me. Too many projects not enough focus. Payton sent me his pressure gauges 2 years ago, but they didn't fit my calipers so I never checked.
I am definitely not an analysis to paralysis guy, I put things together and beat the sh*t out of it to find the week links. Now that I'm focused on the brakes, I'll screw with them until they work. There are so many variables with this crap, I feel the charts only get you in the ball park, the rest is all on you.
My car is the only one I've driven on a road course, so honestly I didn't know what "RIGHT" was. I can sure clue you in to what wrong is though.LOL