INITIAL PERFORMANCE REVIEW
So now that I've fully bedded in the pads and have had some time to put plenty of miles in, drive the vehicle in various conditions such as around town, highway speeds, and stop and go traffic, thought I'd share my initial impressions.
First off it's important to immediately bed the pads in after install. Until this is done, brake pedal will feel like there's excess travel and very mushy. Good to only drive on roads that you're completely familiar with and know where risk areas might be, so you can avoid any emergency maneuvers and more specifically emergency braking.
After bedding in the pads the first evening I drove the 80 around, my initial impression was that this stops better than our completely stock LX450 that had all it's brakes refreshed; new pads, rotors, new calipers, and complete brake fluid flush. This is comparing our 6k+ lb 80 on heavy 38's, so right off the bat I felt like I accomplished my mission with the matched front and rear kit. This is of course not a back to back comparison though, so take from it what you will at this point.
This weekend I drove 100km(200km round trip) to Cruiser Days here in Lower Mainland BC and got to reveal the brakes in person. Also been driving around town, and all in I probably put around 600km by now, so still early on. I'm impressed with the high speed stopping of this thing. On the open highway I went through several tests to scrub speed from 80-90kmh down to 30-40kmh, and the brakes did so effortlessly and confidently. The brakes can drop speed without continuing to increase the pedal pressure further, like I previously had to. On the previous setup I could put moderate pressure on the brakes and rate of deceleration would drop the longer you would hold your brakes. IE dropping from 80-60 would take x amount of pedal input, but 60-40 would require double that, and 40-20 double that again, almost like it lightly overheats during a single high speed scrub. But with the new setup braking effort is completely linear. You hold the pedal down and you get x amount of braking power no matter how long you hold it down.
At this point if you saw my story on IG I upgraded my claim that it stops "better than completely stock LX450 with refreshed brakes" to... This thing stops like a modern vehicle and not something 3 decades old! The system is nicely balanced front and rear, one of my major objectives! Not too front biased, not too rear biased. Just feels right.
One not so apparent thing I noticed that most may never will. I previously upgraded all my lines to braided stainless, but always felt there was still some flex somewhere in the braking system, and I believed it to be in the cast iron calipers. Upgrading to the much larger and forged Wilwood Aero caliper that sensation is completely gone. So definitely was the front calipers. Might even be more responsive/firmer when we ditch the floating rear. If we opt for the WW Superlite caliper which is smaller compared to the Aero, but still also forged, I think it will still provide a significant upgrade to caliper stiffness from stock.
Some nuances...
Performance tuned brake systems are always about sacrificing some things to pursue more consistent, reliable, and more powerful braking performance. In this case we do sacrifice a bit of NVH. Due to the high friction pads in the rear, rotor wear and dust will be increased. One of the reasons a high carbon rotor is desired for it's higher durability. More rotor wear due to the higher friction pads mean more dust. Dust is corrosive, and of course therefore harmful for the environment, so there's that. If you have expensive wheels, wash them regularly, or ceramic coat them like I did. The front rotors should not dust as much due to using a much milder pad in the form of Wilwood BP-20. Front rotors should also last noticeably longer. This of course should be reserved for long term driving impressions, so update on rotor wear and dust will come once I've developed longer term opinions.
Another that has to do with NVH, due to higher clamping forces, friction, and increased braking leverage, (this is consistent throughout the board in most high performance braking applications) I notice on instances in normal day to day driving where I come to a complete stop, the last 15-0kmh I notice a slight bit of high friction noise, some minor sacrifice in harmonics, and not as smooth as something where comfort is higher prioritized. Think like you're sliding two pieces of rock with each other at higher pressures... This is pretty nominal though as you have to feel and listen for it. The momentum from 15-0kmh is not high enough to overcome the high friction levels. This might be attributed to a more linear brake feel as I mentioned earlier. A simple solution is to just lightly let off the pedal to decrease the clamping force when you reach these low speeds. Honestly might just all be muscle memory from not trusting the previous brakes, and might just have to get used to having something more modern...
High friction, high heat range pads typically come at the cost of low cold performance. Modern technology does allow some pads in this category, like the EBC Bluestuff, and Hawk HP+, to have noticeably improved cold performance. While still higher friction that stock, there is still some minor sacrifices. Braking isn't as consistent as it is after a few stops(4-5) around town. I would say while the temperatures of this system at cold temperatures is still far superior to stock, it's just something to be aware of. Once the full rear kit is developed we can definitely drop down to a milder rear pad and get more consistent braking throughout the entirety of your drive. This to me is the only real downside of the Stage 2-Lite. While it will be significantly more cost effective, you are in turn running a true high performance rear setup given the limitations of stock rotor and caliper.
Some things for me to continue testing...
The benefit of running a motorsport caliper is the vast list of pad options to your disposal. We're very much limited to a handful of pads on the stock 80 calipers. But with Wilwood almost all other brake pad manufacturers have a number of options at different performance levels. I have a couple different options for front pads on hand, and may pick up another that I think might be best suited for the current setup. Not sure how frequently I'll change them, would like to have more long term feel for the current setup, but I like tinkering with things... Not much I could do to the rear beside adjust the lspv or go with a manual prop valve. (This is not compatible with LSPV delete without a proportioning valve to tune the rear bias.)
One of the main reasons for me to develop this kit is how quickly the stock system, even with performance pads, overheat. When pads overheat the coefficient of friction can drop to half, sacrificing a lot of braking performance. Interior mountains of BC are a good test. You can be in mountain passes for hours. So hopefully I can test the thermal capacity of this system at some point in the near future.
If anyone's in the Squamish area or in the Lower Mainland, BC and want to get a feel for the system, shoot me a message. More than glad to take people out.