What's the "pecking" order as far as A/M BBK brakes?
#31
Like I said, weight differences inbetwen brands ins't going to make or break you. When you say "I'll probably end up with 2 pc rotors", that means you aren't serious about weight savings or you're priorities aren't in the right place. Difference inbetween let's say an oem Akebono 14" 1 pc and an aftermarket replacement 2pc is probably close to 8-10lbs each. The difference inbetween 2 different calipers is going to be less than 1 lb. AND the rotor is rotating mass vs non rotating mass of the caliper. Rotating mass is much more critical weight wise.
I'd go oem Akebono w/ aftermarket 2pc front and back. Perhaps not the bling but definately functional, light and probably the cheaper option. Just powder coat them if you want them blingity
I'd go oem Akebono w/ aftermarket 2pc front and back. Perhaps not the bling but definately functional, light and probably the cheaper option. Just powder coat them if you want them blingity
(1) there's no A/M rotor available at this time for purchase without buying a kit
(2) I'll end up with an A/M BBK kit (still deciding on what route to go)
(3) I'll buy the 37 kit, and run the 1 pc rotors until good 2pc ones are for sale
I know of the weight savings between a 1pc and 2pc. I had brembo 1 pc rotors on my old car and they were heavy as hell.
#34
For street use, the stock brakes can easily lock up the wheels on a panic stop if there were no ABS. The ABS equalizes the stopping distance beween ALL BBK brands by not allowing the tires to skid (assuming the wheels and tires are not switched). So ... what really determines stopping distance in normal driving is the coefficient of friction between the tire and the road.
The BBK does buy you less unsprung weight using aluminum calipers and 2-piece rotors when compared to the stock brakes. The suspension can theoretically rebound and respond faster.
The larger the rotor, the better the heat dissapation which minimizes brake fade during repeated stops or stops from high speed. Even better are larger slotted and/or drilled aero-rotors.
2 piece rotors are lighter than 1 piece rotors for less unsprung weight AND less rotational intertia. But the rotational intertia is a secondary benefit because it is not that different between the two (similar rotor diameters). Intertia is also a function of the distance to the center of rotation. That said, you get more acceleration using lighter wheels and tires vs lighter brake rotors.
I like StopTech for their customer support and because they are local to me.
The BBK does buy you less unsprung weight using aluminum calipers and 2-piece rotors when compared to the stock brakes. The suspension can theoretically rebound and respond faster.
The larger the rotor, the better the heat dissapation which minimizes brake fade during repeated stops or stops from high speed. Even better are larger slotted and/or drilled aero-rotors.
2 piece rotors are lighter than 1 piece rotors for less unsprung weight AND less rotational intertia. But the rotational intertia is a secondary benefit because it is not that different between the two (similar rotor diameters). Intertia is also a function of the distance to the center of rotation. That said, you get more acceleration using lighter wheels and tires vs lighter brake rotors.
I like StopTech for their customer support and because they are local to me.
#36
Hmm - so adding the Akebonos to our cars will probably hurt performance due to the extra rotational inertia?
san - what's your real reason for going BBK? Especially if no tracking - just looks? I can't imagine you'll really notice much performance difference on the street
san - what's your real reason for going BBK? Especially if no tracking - just looks? I can't imagine you'll really notice much performance difference on the street
#37
ST-40 / ST-22
If you wanna stop fast from high speed, the BBK will make a difference.
https://g35driver.com/forums/tech-v3...-tech-bbk.html
If you wanna stop fast from high speed, the BBK will make a difference.
https://g35driver.com/forums/tech-v3...-tech-bbk.html
#39
Red Card Crew
iTrader: (24)
For street use, the stock brakes can easily lock up the wheels on a panic stop if there were no ABS. The ABS equalizes the stopping distance beween ALL BBK brands by not allowing the tires to skid (assuming the wheels and tires are not switched). So ... what really determines stopping distance in normal driving is the coefficient of friction between the tire and the road.
The BBK does buy you less unsprung weight using aluminum calipers and 2-piece rotors when compared to the stock brakes. The suspension can theoretically rebound and respond faster.
The larger the rotor, the better the heat dissapation which minimizes brake fade during repeated stops or stops from high speed. Even better are larger slotted and/or drilled aero-rotors.
2 piece rotors are lighter than 1 piece rotors for less unsprung weight AND less rotational intertia. But the rotational intertia is a secondary benefit because it is not that different between the two (similar rotor diameters). Intertia is also a function of the distance to the center of rotation. That said, you get more acceleration using lighter wheels and tires vs lighter brake rotors.
I like StopTech for their customer support and because they are local to me.
The BBK does buy you less unsprung weight using aluminum calipers and 2-piece rotors when compared to the stock brakes. The suspension can theoretically rebound and respond faster.
The larger the rotor, the better the heat dissapation which minimizes brake fade during repeated stops or stops from high speed. Even better are larger slotted and/or drilled aero-rotors.
2 piece rotors are lighter than 1 piece rotors for less unsprung weight AND less rotational intertia. But the rotational intertia is a secondary benefit because it is not that different between the two (similar rotor diameters). Intertia is also a function of the distance to the center of rotation. That said, you get more acceleration using lighter wheels and tires vs lighter brake rotors.
I like StopTech for their customer support and because they are local to me.
But I do agree that the tires are going to make a big difference. But since most people with bbks run much sticker/wider tires, a proper bbk is going to be a bit better than oem for a 60-0 and much better with a 100-0 and fade resistance. Not to mention better brake feel/modulation.
Being able to lock the brakes is one thing. But having to stand on them or having no feel inbetween locking and not locking is quite another. But I also agree that improving the stock/oem 60-0 time is very difficult and probably rarely done. Stoptech might be one of the setups that actually test for this and achieve it.
#42
Actually IMHO the ABS isn't the equalizer inbetween all bbks. If one bbk has a much different bias than another then the one with too much front bias is going to activate the abs up front sooner than the others. That means the other bbk with the proper bias calculations is going to use the rear brakes more and not activate the front abs as soon.
But I do agree that the tires are going to make a big difference. But since most people with bbks run much sticker/wider tires, a proper bbk is going to be a bit better than oem for a 60-0 and much better with a 100-0 and fade resistance. Not to mention better brake feel/modulation.
Being able to lock the brakes is one thing. But having to stand on them or having no feel inbetween locking and not locking is quite another. But I also agree that improving the stock/oem 60-0 time is very difficult and probably rarely done. Stoptech might be one of the setups that actually test for this and achieve it.
But I do agree that the tires are going to make a big difference. But since most people with bbks run much sticker/wider tires, a proper bbk is going to be a bit better than oem for a 60-0 and much better with a 100-0 and fade resistance. Not to mention better brake feel/modulation.
Being able to lock the brakes is one thing. But having to stand on them or having no feel inbetween locking and not locking is quite another. But I also agree that improving the stock/oem 60-0 time is very difficult and probably rarely done. Stoptech might be one of the setups that actually test for this and achieve it.
#44
#45