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Cary,
What about OEM rotors along with say Porterfield pads for the 100 series on an 80?
Until this thread came up I was seriously considering going with DBA or Powerstop slotted rotors with 100 series OEM pads. I guess I like others have "fallen" for the voodoo magic that the slotted rotors supposedly offer
So much to learn, so little time
Yes, completely. I was just pointing out that in the super high performance arena of racing, they don't even bling out with drilled rotors. Shows to me that slotted is the way to go in high performance situations.
No kidding lolI can't believe it, I'm agreeing with Scott.![]()
I am not sure why people who are against cross-drilling keep posting. Just move on.
PS. Happy owner of cross-drilled rotors.
Am I the only one in here that uses cheap Autozone brakes and has never had a problem? Even if they wear faster there is an Autozone on every corner that will swap them out.
Shaun
There is no data to support better stopping distances with C-D, because that's not a function of cross drilling. That is a function of clamping force and pad only. IOW, put a better pad on, you will get better braking (up to fade). The *only* thing crossdrilling does in *theory* is it gives more surface area for cooling. This realizes the biggest benefit on narrow rotors, ala motorcycle or shifter cart, where the percentage gain of surface area is the greatest, airflow can go thru the rotor and wheel easily, and the rotor is small and thin. On the 80, you can't put enough holes in it to give you a surface area gain that will make a difference.
I abuse my brakes pretty regularly, with cheap S-M pads and tow all the time. The last time I felt *fade* was at Steamboat after 45minutes of full boost ice track runs. I drove 1 mile to cool down the brakes, and went back at it.
I don't understand this at all. Crossdrilling can't reduce stopping distances, that's not a function of that mod. Think about it, a crossdrilled rotor has less pad contact to surface of the rotor, all else being equal. And at the heat point of fade, a couple % better surface area isn't going to do a darn thing for cooling. You get a set of brakes hot, it's not the crossdrilled that's going to cool them, it's not using them at all.
If you want to cool your brakes, duct air to them, it's cheap and proven effective mod, especially if there is no ducting to them from the factory. I used to help a friend take home depot drier duct and zip tie it to his bumper, so he could run his stock quattro at the track, then snip the zip ties at the end of the day. Worked like a charm.
Shaun, you can't measure something that is outside the ability of the variable to affect. Put simply there is no correlation of crossdrilling to braking distance on the 80. I doubt there is a correlation of crossdrilling to fade resistance either, but I'd just rephrase there is just a higher correlation of ducting to fade resistance.
Don't waste your money on this unless you think it looks cool. Said that many times over the years. Lots of folks still do it. Edit: A lot of folks marketing it, including Brembo and others. Tough to find a good tech article actually on the benefit. Try this one Shaun
http://www.mazda6tech.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=19&Itemid=50
Scott J
Do you actually have an apples to apples comparison?
Because my Superduty stops the same as stock with a set of Autozone rotors on it..
Brembo is a good company. I would be suprised if they were any worse than stock..
Any quality rotor will get you what you need.