Hello again to everyone and thanks for the kind words and following along! First, no, I haven't given up
. Just as was mentioned by a few above, the holidays , family stuff, etc have limited my updates.
I'm falling asleep while typing this so I will give a concise update:
-- calipers are chosen. Four piston fixed. Common donor vehicle.
-- had to redesign adapter bracket - this has been largest delay
-- have put dual caliper option on hold mainly due to finding a larger, much more rigid single caliper. Dual caliper option required smaller caliper with less rigidity.
-- have learned that rigidity is key to brake feel and efficiency. Spoke with numerous performance braking specialists regarding this.
-- have chosen new rotor to allow more clearance with wider range of wheels. slightly smaller, but calculations and experts have shown this will be negligible given massively stronger caliper.
-- really cool point --> have been in contact with a popular brake manufacturer regarding pad selection, trying to maximize cold coefficient of friction (mu). Have found pad with mu of 0.53 cold, which rises when hot (like a race pad does) to over 0.62 when hot. For comparison, our average OEM pad is in the ballpark of 0.36 when cold and drops when hot. This is a huge point that can't be overstated. That means a 50% increase in brake torque cold with nothing but pads. Wow. Nearly all pads that reach a mu of 0.60+ are crazy rare sintered pads for supercars or motorcycles. And, when cold, they usually suck with a mu of around 0.3. This is amazing.
(OK... Here is the geek section so tune out now if you dont like this part...)
Keep in mind that the braking force is the caliper clamping force times this "mu" coefficient. So if you increase mu from 0.40 to 0.50, you get a 25% increase in brake force (which is then multiplied by rotor radius to get brake torque). For comparison, a "big brake conversion" simply increasing rotor diameter from 12" to 14" only increases brake torque by 16%. So pads are THAT important. We are talking potentially a 40-50% increase from pads alone! (Again, OEM mu = 0.36 to new mu = 0.53). We can't forget however that brake torque is dissipated as heat, and has to go somewhere, so a larger and thicker rotor with a good vent design is still a wise part of this equation.
OK...that wasn't so concise. Anyway, I thank you all for your kind words and patience. Once the brackets are finalized, I am ready to release the parts list. The special pads aren't due for availability until next month.
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