brake upgrades, ss/tc
brake upgrades, ss/tc
I was cruising thru the mountains yesterday and I believe I cooked the fluid. At 60 with the brakes to the floor abs didn't engage and I'm on stock tires on the wear bar and they were about 3lbs low on air... needless to say the following immediate right was interesting... so do these cars cook the stock pads or the fluid first? I'm considering some hawk hp+ since I liked the hps pads I had on my previous car
I took mine to two track days in 90+ degrees when I first got the car with stock pads, tires and fluid and never had severe fade like that. Maybe would need to take it easy for a couple corners every other lap towards the end of a session. I cant see them fading on a mountain road in 65 degrees. I have felt some inconsistency in the braking on loose surfaces. Maybe some gravel and the ABS freaked out?
The HP+ will have a lot more dust than the HPS and have a bit more of a squeel. I will say that noise doesnt bug me and the extra bite that i have got from the HP+ over the HPS is awesome!!
I did a track day with my STI on HP+ and tho i woulnt use HP+ on a long track day at road america again they would be fine for street driving and great for autoX.
I started swapping pads at the track for track days but that gets $$$ fast.
I did a track day with my STI on HP+ and tho i woulnt use HP+ on a long track day at road america again they would be fine for street driving and great for autoX.
I started swapping pads at the track for track days but that gets $$$ fast.
I took mine to two track days in 90+ degrees when I first got the car with stock pads, tires and fluid and never had severe fade like that. Maybe would need to take it easy for a couple corners every other lap towards the end of a session. I cant see them fading on a mountain road in 65 degrees. I have felt some inconsistency in the braking on loose surfaces. Maybe some gravel and the ABS freaked out?
also i've had a "service brakes soon" indicator flash on my DIC before after beating on it down this same stretch of road but ABS was working fine and everything was okay... hasnt happened since and no weird stuff untill this event.
If you got the brake light on, then that says to me that your pads are low, so the fluid is low. This also causes the fluid to heat up faster, because there's less pad as a heat shield. Sounds like you toasted the fluid.
Change your pads, flush the fluid with something decent, like Valvoline synthetic, or ATE. Stock pads are pretty good on the TC. You can run titanium shims too, like I do, but honestly, I only use those for track work.
Change your pads, flush the fluid with something decent, like Valvoline synthetic, or ATE. Stock pads are pretty good on the TC. You can run titanium shims too, like I do, but honestly, I only use those for track work.
DH548 Titanium Brake Backing Plate for Chevrolet Cobalt SS Brembo [TS-T-DH0548] : TiSpeed Titanium Brake Backing Plate Heat Shields, Improve Brake Performance, Reduce Brake Fade and Extend Brake Fluid Life
Code "tfa1010" will get you a few bucks off.
Ahh I see, as for the stock fluid in these cars is it ok for "spirited driving" (i.e. Canyon Passes and Auto-x)? Or would you stillr ecommend flushing the brake fluid every year? I'm assuming for track days you would want something with a higher boiling temp and some stainless steel lines right?
If it's a daily driver, once a year will suffice. If it's getting track time, you need to bleed more often, and yes, you need to run higher temp fluid. If you're really going fast, you need to swap the pads to race pads up front, like Cobalt Friction XR1, or Hawk DTC60/70.
Daily driver? Stock fluid, Valvoline synthetic, or Castrol LMA are all sufficient.
Daily driver? Stock fluid, Valvoline synthetic, or Castrol LMA are all sufficient.
If it's a daily driver, once a year will suffice. If it's getting track time, you need to bleed more often, and yes, you need to run higher temp fluid. If you're really going fast, you need to swap the pads to race pads up front, like Cobalt Friction XR1, or Hawk DTC60/70.
Daily driver? Stock fluid, Valvoline synthetic, or Castrol LMA are all sufficient.
Daily driver? Stock fluid, Valvoline synthetic, or Castrol LMA are all sufficient.
Yes, we have DOT 4, which is what most people will want to stick with. Some of us run race brake fluid, but if you don't track heavily, don't do it, because it just means you'll have to bleed the brakes more often (doesn't have corrosion inhibitors like standard brake fluid).
I stand by my above suggestions for DD/autox cars. Add ATE type 200 or ATE Super Blue to the list, if you want something that's a little more high performance.
I do the tried and true 2 man brake bleeding method. Look it up online.
I stand by my above suggestions for DD/autox cars. Add ATE type 200 or ATE Super Blue to the list, if you want something that's a little more high performance.
I do the tried and true 2 man brake bleeding method. Look it up online.
Yes, we have DOT 4, which is what most people will want to stick with. Some of us run race brake fluid, but if you don't track heavily, don't do it, because it just means you'll have to bleed the brakes more often (doesn't have corrosion inhibitors like standard brake fluid).
I stand by my above suggestions for DD/autox cars. Add ATE type 200 or ATE Super Blue to the list, if you want something that's a little more high performance.
I do the tried and true 2 man brake bleeding method. Look it up online.
I stand by my above suggestions for DD/autox cars. Add ATE type 200 or ATE Super Blue to the list, if you want something that's a little more high performance.
I do the tried and true 2 man brake bleeding method. Look it up online.
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