HeelToeHero
Well-Known Member
I believe they are refering to the 6 piston brembos from the performance pack cars.Which Brembo package did you go with?
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I believe they are refering to the 6 piston brembos from the performance pack cars.Which Brembo package did you go with?
I'm seeing a couple of different brake packages by Ford and I'm trying to find the correct one for this. thanks.I believe they are refering to the 6 piston brembos from the performance pack cars.
Yes, all GTs regardless of options or packages have the same exact rear brakes (rotors, calipers, pads, lines etc.)Are the PP rear brakes, calipers and rotors, the same as the standard GT brakes?
And the master cylinder to drive those front calipers.Yes, all GTs regardless of options or packages have the same exact rear brakes (rotors, calipers, pads, lines etc.)
The PP only upgrades the front brakes.
Yes, I've been reading that my GT Master cylinder will work with the PP Brembo front brakes. Correct?And the master cylinder to drive those front calipers.
It will work, but you wont be getting the correct amount of pressure for the larger calipers. It won't put you through a guard rail, but the engineers put a larger MC on the PP for a reason.Yes, I've been reading that my GT Master cylinder will work with the PP Brembo front brakes. Correct?
Would it be better if I just put some better pads on my stock 4-piston GT calipers?It will work, but you wont be getting the correct amount of pressure for the larger calipers. It won't put you through a guard rail, but the engineers put a larger MC on the PP for a reason.
Pedal effort being one of them. When you do the calculations for how the hydraulic bias changes, and factor in the rotor size change for the PP, the brake bias changes less than half a percent. Bore size alone will not change brake bias in a bled brake system, only the force required to generate a given line pressure. It's possible that the MC has different internal biasing, but irrespective of that, the bias change is insignificant.It will work, but you wont be getting the correct amount of pressure for the larger calipers. It won't put you through a guard rail, but the engineers put a larger MC on the PP for a reason.
How serious are you about tracking the car? If anything more than the rare HPDE or autocross, do the Brembos. You can also keep the calipers and do a 2 pc rotor from Steeda or Baer. For that money you might as well do the Brembos.Would it be better if I just put some better pads on my stock 4-piston GT calipers?
Yes.If I understand your calculations above I can go ahead and add the PP Brembo brakes to my GT and be ok? Yes, rare HPDE or autocross is what I'm looking at.
Good info. All I'm doing before my first track days is new / upgraded Front brakes. Tires are about new. Only a few thousand miles on them.Invest in more track days, seat time, and tires. You'll realize when you need upgrades once you start going fast enough and start wearing out the outer shoulders of your front tires. Get camber plates.
If you really want, get wider wheels and tires to extend the life out of the tires on track. If you have money to blow, sure start modding your car. Far too many beginners spend too much on parts and not enough on track days and tires because it's "too expensive".