Jstang23
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #1
Hey all, I recently picked up a 2023 GT (new from the dealer) and I'm panning on getting into a few (1-3) HPDEs a year with it. I have spent the greater part of the month reading a much as I can about these cars and how they handle the track. I've come to the conclusion that managing heat (brakes, transmission, diff, and engine) is the key to success. I have noticed a few things for the 2023 MY that differs from the rest of the 2018+ models.
First: The front brake rotors have been corrected. Previously the vents were facing the outside causing the cooling ducts under the car to basically not cool the brakes. The rotors on the '23 are now facing the inside of the car. I haven't been able to overheat the brakes up in the mountains yet, I'm wondering how they'll hold up on the track.
Second: The engine/transmission stays remarkably cool. I haven't tracked it but I have taken it to the mountains and to autocross and not once did it ever get hot. For y'alls awareness I did spec miata for a few years so, yes I know that I was actually pushing the car hard for mountain roads. I'm not sure if they changed something... or just because now the engine says to run 5w-30 on the cap now.
Third: The rear diff... also does not overheat. I run an autocross for my area and have taken it to two events now. I put in 4 back to back runs hard driving to see what it would do and it seems like the car handled the heat perfectly. I do not have the diff temperature gauge in my car but I never got the warning. Also my CHT never got above 210.
I'm just wondering if anyone thinks they might have changed things, and not told anyone. With the new s650 coming out soon I bet Ford is trying to empty the parts bins for the s550... wondering if they have put any parts from the higher models to improve things a bit for the final production year. Just looking for possible opinions on this and since the rotors have been flipped would anyone still recommend changing the brakes/fluid for a track day?
Thanks!
First: The front brake rotors have been corrected. Previously the vents were facing the outside causing the cooling ducts under the car to basically not cool the brakes. The rotors on the '23 are now facing the inside of the car. I haven't been able to overheat the brakes up in the mountains yet, I'm wondering how they'll hold up on the track.
Second: The engine/transmission stays remarkably cool. I haven't tracked it but I have taken it to the mountains and to autocross and not once did it ever get hot. For y'alls awareness I did spec miata for a few years so, yes I know that I was actually pushing the car hard for mountain roads. I'm not sure if they changed something... or just because now the engine says to run 5w-30 on the cap now.
Third: The rear diff... also does not overheat. I run an autocross for my area and have taken it to two events now. I put in 4 back to back runs hard driving to see what it would do and it seems like the car handled the heat perfectly. I do not have the diff temperature gauge in my car but I never got the warning. Also my CHT never got above 210.
I'm just wondering if anyone thinks they might have changed things, and not told anyone. With the new s650 coming out soon I bet Ford is trying to empty the parts bins for the s550... wondering if they have put any parts from the higher models to improve things a bit for the final production year. Just looking for possible opinions on this and since the rotors have been flipped would anyone still recommend changing the brakes/fluid for a track day?
Thanks!
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