Walt
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #16
If rotor wear isn't too bad, eg more or less the same as regular street wear, I think I might just get one set of XP10's for both the front and rear. My car isn't really DD anymore, more for weekend cruising, longer trips on vacation and some track days. I do about 5 track days a year, atleast less than 10. So I expect to replace those pads once a year, which is something I can live with (if what I'm assuming is correct) and hopefully be able to use the rotors for longer, atleast 2 years or so.With the CTs and G-locs, rotor wear is far less of an issue than it is with other pad formulations. I got half a dozen events out of XP10's, and this is when I was still running the car's really little OE 12.4" front brakes. Rotor wear rates in street driving with XP12s were much, much lower than with Hawk HP+ pads, closer to rotor wear rates with HPS street-only pads.
I do think that 10's are enough pad . . . though there is the question of whether your car's front rotors feed air into the rotors from the outer (wheel) side or from the inner (strut) side. Strut-side, or back side air inletting is much preferred for tracking, and compatible with the usual methods of adding more brake cooling (where wheel-side air inlets obviously wouldn't be).
Would this scenario be somewhat correct or would you still suggest to get 2 dedicated sets?
My rotors do feed air from the outer side though, but since I'm having to replace them anyway now, I will have to choose something that feeds from the inner side.
Not really sure what your options are. I wasn't going to sacrifice the fog lights on my '08 either, and cut my own brake cooling inlet holes in the lower radiator inlet pretty much directly under the fog lights. Threw a little spray paint at them and called it good. I'm not a car show guy.
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I thought about cutting a hole similar to yours (in a spare lower grille from ebay) but my bigger intercooler is probably in the way. If there's no other option I might have to run without cooling or just go through the hassle of mounting/dismouting the fog hole kit each time.
Good point, thanks for the heads up.If you choose to run a two-pad scheme, you'll want to run the street pad from the same mfr as your track pads. In CT, that'd be the Bobncat 1521 pad (though you could possibly use the AX-6 autocross pad), and in G-loc it'd be the GS-1 (possibly the R6). I'm not sure about pad compatibility among other pad mfrs, and what I do know is that mixing formulations/pad mfr products is likely to introduce problems.
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