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#322 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
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I get hammered at the border with taxes and duties etc ....but it is still cheaper than what Honda Canada Charges ... $300 even with my Jobber discount Moose |
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#327 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
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I'll bite. Which are good for performance street, which for auto-X/HPDE, and which for racing, if any? What kind of noise & wear characteristics do the street and auto-X pads have, along with temperature sensitivity and initial bite, if you've used their stuff before?
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#328 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
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Never used Endless Before
Compounds CC-A 50-500C 38-45 Mu Sreet / AutoX CC-X - 0-700 C temp range 38-50 mu co-effficeint of friction High performance street / AutoX / HDPE CC-R 150-800 C temp range 35-40 Mu co-effcient of friction HDPE / light Track by Comparasin Project Mu HC+ 0-800C 38-62 Mu CC-R and CC-X straddle what the Project MU HC+ (Titan Kai) HC+ can do ... the HC+ works failry well for booth HP street and HDPE ... but are more street oriented Moose Last edited by Moose; 07-24-2008 at 10:14 PM. |
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#329 (permalink) | |
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Louder than 4 F404-GE-400
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I don't know if this is in there but
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__________________
You know what the sun's all about when the light go out. |
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#331 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
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Today I bolted on a 1999 Acura TL rotor to my 08 Si. The TL rotor is the same diameter as stock but is 28mm thick rather than 25.4mm. My thought is the wider rotor will have a little more thermal capacity and more surface area in the vanes for disc cooling. The idea came from when I had my CRX Si I used a 21mm DX rotor instead of the stock 19mm disc.
Below are my disc measurements [denotes stock Si rotor] Both are 5x114.3 28.19 [25.61] mm disc thickness 11.13 [8.49] mm cooling vane width, so there is more internal cooling surface area with the TL rotor 47.19 [47.49] mm Overall thickness, hat to opposite rotor face 6.06 [6.24] Hat thickness 27.04 [28.45] mm inside hat face (that mates with hub) to rotor (clamping part) centerline 64.32 [64.21] Hub bore, they are both for a 64.1mm hub 18 lbf [16.5 lbf] rotor weight, using a bathroom scale with me on it. So the TL rotor clamping centerline sets 1.41mm (.055”) outward, thus requiring the caliper to be spaced outward the same amount. I bolted the caliper on without a spacer and there was contact between the caliper and rotor. I then inserted a .058” shim washer (the closest size I had) and re-bolted the caliper on. The caliper cleared and rotor spun freely. The closest parts of the caliper to the rotor are the 4 clips that hold the brake to the caliper. There is .015” clearance on the inner side and .021” clearance on the outer side. That indicates .058” is a little much and the .055” spacer would be perfect. My pads fit without modification as they have 6k miles and 1 track day on them. A new set of pads would likely need to be milled .060 each to fit. I have not driven the set-up yet as I plan to test fit a 99-03 Acura TL Brembo BBK (p/n 1A16015A) tomorrow. From what I have found so far, The 5x114.3, 11.8" x 28mm rotor with 64.1 hub bore was used on 99-03 Acura TL (all), 04-08 TL (non-S) and 04-08 TSX. -YMMV Last edited by Zaret; 08-03-2008 at 02:12 AM. Reason: Add weights |
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#332 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
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Zaret
Thanks ... for investigating this I am hoping the Offset on the TL Caliper will be correct to the TL rotor when bolted to the hub, and the TL Caliper mount bolt spacing will be correct not requiring an adaptor plate. the Rotor is the most important part of the equation here (in term of thermal mass and stability) .. I wonder if an OE (Non Brembo) Caliper from a TSX / TL will also bolt up with a TL/TSX rotor ? Moose Last edited by Moose; 07-26-2008 at 11:43 PM. |
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#333 (permalink) | |
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Junior Member
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I tried to pick up a TL caliper but no parts stores had them in stock. Last edited by Zaret; 07-27-2008 at 12:19 AM. |
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#334 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
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Has anyone tried to install a larger diameter brake master cylinder on a 06+ civic? I prefer a high, firm pedal, which the Si lacks. I have found data on the following (please correct if it is wrong or add what you know):
15/16” (23.81mm) 05-06 RSX-S. The RSX looks to use a dual diaphragm vacuum booster (7” and 8”) which may help offset the high pedal effort a 15/16 m/c would cause with the RSX 54mm? or 57mm? front caliper piston diameter. Acura Parts @ AcuraAutomotiveParts.org - Genuine Acura OEM Parts from Acura Carland 7/8” (22.22mm) 02-07 base RSX. Again, it looks to use the dual diaphragm vacuum booster. 13/16” (20.62mm) 04-08 TSX. The TSX has a 10” Vacuum booster. 3/4” (19.05mm) stock 06+ Si and uses a 9” vacuum booster. ??” Acura TL uses a 10” vacuum booster. The Civic is different in that it has a remote filling reservoir since the m/c is buried under the cowl. The Acura RDX also has a remote filling reservoir but I could not find the piston diameter. It looks like there is space for an RSX/TL/TSX type M/C but filling it would be difficult. Based on my experience and calcs, a 13/16" would be nice while a 7/8" would probably be too firm for every day use. |
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#335 (permalink) | ||
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Senior Member
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Have you tried Car-Part.com--Used Auto Parts Market to search for a used caliper (I have had no luck in my neck of the woods) Quote:
Nice ... I think because of the remote resevoir we are basically stuck with the OE or perhaps the RDX M/C, unless somebody can come up with an adaptor to convert a top resevoir to a FG/FD resevoir. The car is notorioulsy over boosted (brake) ... so changing the booster may really help pedal feel. I have been researching various option, and based on previuos swaps I have done(Teg into a EG) you need to find a booster that has the same bolt pattern and piston diameter. The one way you can narrow this down is by the gaskets and seals used. If they use the same M/C to Booster gasket (2 bolt) then the bolt pattern is corrrect. IF they use the same piston seal, then the piston is the same. I am pretty sure that a S2000 booster will work ... as it uses the same gasket. When I had my Si M/C replaced under warentee I measured it. M/C PIston Diameter 16mm OD, 13mm ID Piston length extended - 51MM 81mm O/C bolt spacing FYI - I have used some of the measurements you have taken in the first page of this thread if you do not mind Moose Last edited by Moose; 07-27-2008 at 11:14 AM. |
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#337 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
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I picked up a used Brembo BBK for a 99-03 Acura TL p/n 1A16015A to try an experimental installation on my 2008 Si. It was a good price so I thought it was worth a try.
Executive Summary The kit will bolt up with a little shimming but the brake lines will not bolt up to the factory chassis end male fitting. Kit Specs 2 piece drilled rotor (I would not have picked drilled, but I had no choice, obviously) 12.9 inch diameter 5x114.3 64.13 mm Hub bore Brake disc weight = 11 lbf. Caliper + Mounting bracket and hardware + Brake line + 1/2 worn pads = 9 lbf. 25.70 mm disc thickness 6.59 mm Hat thickness 16.3 mm cooling vane width 52.31 mm Overall thickness, hat to opposite rotor face 32.87 mm inside hat face (that mates with hub) to rotor (clamping part) centerline [52.31-6.59-25.70/2] Details the 2-piece rotors turned out to be wasted. New they are 28mm with a 27mm MIN thickness and these are way under. Since I have back-up ideas I am not too concerned. Replacement friction discs from Brembo run about $350 each plus a new $80 hardware kit. That is not cheap for consumables. Zeckhausen.com has replacement Stoptech discs for much cheaper at about $250 each including all new hardware. The Brembo TL rotor clamping surface centerline is 4.425 mm (.174”) [32.87-28.45 (stock)] inward compared to stock. This resulted in the inside rotor face contacting the lower control arm ball joint mount (BJM). Also, the caliper was not centered on the rotor, it requires .022" shim washers between the disc and hub to center the disk in caliper. However this would be very close to the lower BJM. I installed .072” thick washers between the rotor and hub to prevent the disc from contacting the BJM. This gave me .061” clearance between the disc and BJM. This placed the disc a little outward of the caliper centerline but I still had .042” clearance between the inside part of the caliper and the disk. There was also just enough of the hub lip exposed to fit the wheel hubcentric ring. I did sand down the inside edge of the ring about .020” since it had a generous ID chamfer that made it not want to fit real well. I have a custom hubcentric wheel spacer I can mill down to replace the washers if needed. Radially, everything matched up perfectly. I cut and removed the heat shield, then further cut the heat shield such that there was just enough of it to protect the ball joint and would be held on with 2 of the 3 screws. It would probably be prudent to install heat wrap on the ABS wire and probably even the brake line just to safe. I bent the heat shield such that it just fit between the disc and BJM and screwed it back on. With the disk so close to the ball joint I wanted to try to keep the dust boot from getting fried. The caliper-mounting bracket could be machined and the disc further spaced outward but I want the wheel hubcentric spacer to engage the hub. With the .072” spacer there is just enough of the hub ring to hold the spacer. The hub ring could be further milled or sanded thinner to remove the ID chamfer allowing the disc to move further away from the ball joint while still allowing the use of the hubcentric wheel ring. With everything fitting well I bolted the disc and caliper to the spindle. The last unknown was the Brembo Brake line connection to the stock chassis brake line. This connection was low on my list of concerns but turned out to be a deal killer. The chassis end fitting would only screw about ¾ of a turn into the Brembo line. I compared the Brembo and stock brake line threads and they seem to both be 3/8”-24, I think. However the female brake line end of the Brembo line is only about .25” deep while the stock brake line is about .5” deep. The chassis male end has about .25” of non-threaded flare so the Brembo female fitting was not deep enough to thread the chassis end fitting into. The stock caliper uses a banjo fitting at the caliper while the Brembo uses a threaded fitting so it is not possible to swap the two. So the experiment was over and I bolted the stock brakes back on and called it a weekend. A 15mm spacer is needed to clear the caliper if the stock wheels were to be used. I have Kosei K1-TS 17x8 with 45 offset and the caliper clears fine. Last edited by Zaret; 08-03-2008 at 02:20 AM. |
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#338 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
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I have the CC-R's in the front and can only report street performance as a track day I wanted to attend last week fell through. I am surprised that their cold performance is as good as it is considering the temp rage that the pads work in. They are safe for the street. Initial bite is as good as Hp+ Modulation seems to be better They do squeal but not as bad as the Hawks, again when they are cold on light applications usually when coming to a slow stop. Dusting is bad, quite a bit worse than the Hawk's. They are expensive! I am off to the track (Shannonville long 4km/ 2.5miles) on the 11th of August and will report back my findings at that time. |
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#339 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
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Thanks for the update - keep us posted on your track experiences with them FYI - Keep an eye on the pad wear ... these dual duty pads may wear more than you would expect. Moose |
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